GRTU pleased with rejection of footwear dumping proposal
The EU Antidumping Committee at its meeting on Thursday rejected the Commission proposal to extend the duties for another 15 months, by 15 votes against 10. The GRTU welcomed this decision by the EU-27 trade officials.
After 15 years of protectionism in the footwear sector, the current antidumping duties on imports from China and Vietnam will hopefully end in January 2010. As shoes are essential items, this is a good day for all Europeans. Now we expect that this ‘no’ will be confirmed also at ministerial level.
Today, a majority of Member States have taken a reasonable decision. The reasons to terminate the measures were compelling: due to higher import prices from China and Vietnam, the import activity has shifted to other countries of origin. Production has not returned to Europe. There is no evidence that the measures have saved one single job.
The GRTU had written to the Authorities to ensure that this time round Malta’s stand would be against the further extension of the duties. Even though Malta had during 2006 voted in favour of these duties, against GRTU’s advice, the Minister for Finance, the Economy and Investment assured the GRTU that this time Malta would vote against this imposition.
Anti-dumping rules impose duties on imported products deemed to be below cost price, thus making imports more expensive and driving up prices in our shops. In the current crisis, citizens are right to expect the EU to terminate these long-standing measures which artificially ‘protect’ the footwear industry.
For this specific sector Malta is certainly an importing and not an exporting country, therefore, our retailers and consumers are made to pay extra hefty costs to protect the few foreign European producers. Maltese traders should not have been made to subsidise the few footwear producers still operating in other EU countries.
Free trade benefits consumers and boosts the economy. Europe needs open markets at home to foster market access abroad. This decision has set the points right. If confirmed, the termination of the footwear duties will help Europe on its way out of the crisis. Consumers and competitive industries stand to win – hopefully a precedent for upcoming cases.
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