EU court rejects appeal on China/Vietnam shoe duty

A European court has rejected an appeal by a number of Hong Kong and China-based shoemakers against import duties levied by the European Commission on shoes originating from China and Vietnam.

EU court rejects appeal on China Vietnam shoe duty

Luxembourg-based EU General Court dismissed on Thursday all five appeals lodged by the companies against a decision by the EU’s executive arm to impose tariffs of up to 16.5 percent on Chinese leather shoes and 10 percent on those from Vietnam.

“The adoption of anti-dumping duties is not a penalty for earlier behaviour but a protective and preventive measure against unfair competition resulting from dumping practices,” the EU’s second-highest court ruled.

The European Commission imposed the duties in 2006, following a complaint by European manufacturers who argued that they were unable to compete with shoes dumped in the European market by low-cost producers in China and Vietnam.

The dispute has heightened trade tension between the 27-nation bloc and China, its second biggest trading partner after the United States, and its biggest source of imports.

European Union ministers voted in December to extend the import duties for another 15 months, while Beijing launched a dispute at the World Trade Organisation last month over the EU tariffs, saying they were illegal.

The companies argued that they were unfairly treated by the EU’s executive Commission and were not given sufficient rights to defend the anti-dumping charges, and that the Commission failed to carry out a proper analysis of the market before making its decision.

The court rejected these arguments and dismissed the appeals.

Tags: , , , , ,

Posted by VBN on Mar 6 2010. Filed under Garment Textile. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Stay informed everyday

Subscribe to free RSS and email updates from Vietnam Business News

Subscribe via Email Subscribe in a Reader Follow us on Twitter Connect on Facebook

RSS China Business News

  • Copper up, but demand jitters cap gains
  • Gold prices fall 1 percent, silver was down 0.5 percent at $41.40 an ounce
  • Gold price in Hong Kong opens at 17,440 HK dollars per tael on Wednesday
  • Gold sheds 3 pc in choppiest day in two weeks
  • Appliance retailers eye shopping fest to boost sales
  • Stock break four-day losing streak
  • Swedish auto maker Saab files for bankruptcy protection
  • Chinese tourists to Sri Lanka almost double

Sponsored

Looking for an overseas forex broker?