giovedì 20 novembre 2014

EU: Trade Restrictions Still Prevalent



The tendency to impose trade-restricting measures remains strong among the EU’s commercial partners, fuelling continuing uncertainty in the world economy, the European Commission’s annual
report on protectionism shows. The 11th Report on potentially trade-restrictive measures focuses on the period between 1 June 2013 and 30 June 2014 and covers 31 of EU’s main trading partners. The report complements the findings of the 2013-2014 monitoring reports issued jointly by WTO, UNCTAD and the OECD.

“I regret to see that many countries still consider protectionism a valid policy tool. This goes clearly against the G20’s commitment to abstain from imposing trade restrictions and to remove existing ones. Protectionism damages global value chains; trade openness is what we need if we are to keep the recovery going, especially in times of global economic and political instability” said Cecilia Malmström, the EU Trade Commissioner.

 “As acknowledged by the Summit in Brisbane, G20 members need now to give real proof of their collective commitment to openness in trade.” In the 13 months covered by the report, G20 members and other key EU trading partners adopted a total of 170 new trade-unfriendly measures.

The countries that have adopted the most such measures were Russia, China, India and Indonesia. At the same time, only 12 pre-existing trade barriers have been removed. This means that hundreds of protectionist measures adopted since the beginning of the economic downturn continue to hamper world trade, despite the G20 commitment, the EU Commission said.

According to the report, the number of measures applied at the border and quickly obstructing trade –already high last year – continued to rise, with Russia applying the highest number of individual measures affecting imports. “The number of new exports restrictions has also risen, a trend that is particularly worrying. All countries depend on each other’s natural resources and such practices can have detrimental consequences for global commodity markets and value chains,” the report reads.

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