Sunday, June 9, 2013

France's Hollande says EU, China must resolve trade disputes

(Reuters) - French President Francois Hollande said on Saturday the European Union must work with China and called for a balanced resolution to an escalating trade dispute that began with solar panels but has since spread to European wines.


Speaking at a conference with Japanese business representatives in Tokyo, Hollande said France's goal was to sell more products to the Chinese but that there needed to be clear ground rules and more cooperation between both sides.

"We need to work with China... to develop our economies but also to define rules, principles and to open new areas of cooperation," Hollande said.

"We need to resolve our trade problems with China through discussion, without advantages being given to one country over another."

The Chinese authorities this week launched an anti-dumping inquiry into European wine sales, seen as a retaliatory move after the EU moved to impose duties on Chinese solar panels.

The move sparked outrage in France, which in 2012 accounted for more than half of the total annual $1 billion volume of EU wine exported to China, excluding Hong Kong. Now there are worries that the tit-for-tat dispute will spread to the auto sector.

Europe's official car industry association said on Friday Beijing may look into a complaint about luxury cars imported from the EU. "I want the Chinese to buy more French products," said Hollande.

"It is up to us to be more competitive and to convince the Chinese that there can be reciprocity."

reuters.com

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