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U.S. Plans WTO Complaint Against EU on Electronics, People Say

Written on May 28, 2008

The U.S. will file a complaint at the World Trade Organization today over tariffs the European Union imposed on computer monitors, cable converter boxes and printers, people familiar with the case said.

The U.S. Trade Representative's office plans to say that the EU is undermining a decade-old agreement to eliminate duties worldwide on technology products by contending that some new items fall outside the scope of the accord, the people say. Japan is likely to join in the case, one person said.

The dispute concerns the 1996 Information Technology Agreement, which eliminates tariffs on high-tech products among the largest makers and consumers of electronic goods. The accord saves makers of those products $5 billion a year, according to the Consumer Electronics Association, a U.S. industry group.

The initial case will involve three products, all developed after 1996, that the EU contends aren't covered by the accord. It says that the flat-panel computer monitors that show videos are televisions, not computer components, and so face 14 percent duties. The EU also says that printers with other capabilities, such as faxing, aren't the same as devices that print only and therefore face a 6 percent duty. Cable converter boxes with Internet access have also been categorized to face a duty.

An Announcement

U.S. Trade Representative Susan Schwab scheduled a press conference today to make an “announcement on the European Communities and the Information Technology Agreement,'' according to a notice from her office low rates payday advance. Her spokesman, Sean Spicer, declined to comment.

The issue has been a long-standing complaint of American high-tech companies, and has been picked up by lawmakers. In March 2007, Democrats on the House Ways and Means Committee urged the U.S. to file a WTO complaint, identifying it as one of the six main barriers to American exports. Schwab threatened to bring a complaint at the WTO during a speech to the CEA's conference in January.

“If countries can pick and choose which parts of trade agreements they can live up to, it undermines the whole WTO process,'' said Michael Maibach, president of the European- American Business Council. “It's an issue of principle.''

Under WTO rules, the U.S. has to first file a request for consultations at the WTO, and then could ask for a three-judge panel to adjudicate the complaint after 60 days.

U.S. officials are worried about the precedent the technology duties might set, industry groups said.

“This has the potential to unravel the entire agreement,'' said E. Sage Chandler, senior director for international trade at the CEA.

The U.S. already has cases pending against the EU over aid its governments have provided Airbus SAS and over restrictions on the sale of genetically modified foods there.

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