This article was first published 21 years ago

India, US curbing Chinese goods entry

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India and the United States are among the 10 top countries, which have slapped anti-dumping measures on Chinese goods to limit their entry in their market, a senior Chinese official has said.

China's "robust export" triggered more countries to use anti-dumping measures as a major means of trade relief - limiting Chinese manufactured products in their market, the official said.

Since 1979, thirty-four countries and regions have refused more than 4,000 Chinese products in 673 anti-dumping and anti-subsidising cases, causing economic loss of $19.1 billion, director of the Bureau of Fair Trade for Import and Export under the Ministry of Commerce, Wang Shichun said in a keynote speech on a trade relief forum held in Beijing on Monday.

The United States, the European Union, India, Argentina, Turkey, Australia, South Africa, Mexico, Canada and Brazil are the top 10 countries or regions which frequently use trade relief means to turn down Chinese products, Wang was quoted by Xinhua news agency.

Wang said the government will try its best to resolve dumping disputes, but Chinese companies should be more self-disciplined and enhance their ability to respond to anti-dumping charges.

The Chinese government has forecast that the country is expected to hit a record $1.1 trillion with an annual growth of about 30 percent this year, ranking the world's third largest after the United States and Germany.

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