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Factories shut as crisis hits China

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British Broadcasting Corporation

Factories shut as crisis hits China

Page last updated at 01:44 GMT, Wednesday, 19 November 2008

By James Reynolds
BBC News, Guangdong province, southern China


Outside the An Jia baby cot factory in Dongguan, a group of factory workers surrounds a single policeman on a motorbike.

An abandoned furniture factory in Guangdong province, China
Once-thriving workshops are now silent and bare
"Where are the three people you arrested?" they shout at him. "Give them back to us!"

The officer looks uneasy and he decides to retreat.

Right now, factory workers here are angry. The world's financial crisis has begun to hit them.

It is easy to understand why: since the West can't afford to buy as much, China isn't able to sell as much. In better times, the An Jia factory would ship its baby cots to the US. But now its workers say the US has stopped buying. Their wages have been cut by up to 75%.

One man waves two wage slips, typed on small pieces of paper. The slip for May shows that he earned 2,523 yuan ($370; £248) that month. The slip for September shows that his earnings were cut to 445 yuan ($65).

"Our boss wants us to bail him out," shouts Li San Le, one of the workers.

"When things were good, the boss didn't give us a raise, but now that he's in trouble, he wants us to rescue him," adds a woman standing in the crowd.

Full story

EU slaps duties on China goods as G20 meets
  • Reuters, Saturday November 15 2008
(Recasts with details, background, industry reaction)
By Darren Ennis

eulogo.jpegBRUSSELS, Nov 15 (Reuters) - The European Union put anti-dumping duties on Chinese-made candles and non-alloy steel products on Saturday, approving an earlier-flagged move as leaders at the G20 summit called for countries to avoid trade protectionism.

With trade disputes between Brussels and Beijing on the rise, the move comes as Chinese officials meet their European counterparts at the Group of 20 advanced and emerging nations in Washington.
Import tariffs of up to 60 percent will be slapped on Chinese candles which accounted for 300 million euros ($380.6 million) of the EU market, worth 810 million euros in 2007.

Extra duties of up to 50 percent will also be placed on non-alloy steel wire products from the Asian powerhouse for the next six months, the EU's Official Journal said. The decision comes as G20 leaders discuss a draft communique which asks countries to resist rising protectionist pressures in response to the global economic downturn and focus on reviving stalled world trade talks aimed at reducing trade barriers.

Since taking over her post from Peter Mandelson last month, the EU's trade chief Catherine Ashton has also repeatedly called for countries to avoid a repeat of the upsurge in protectionism which followed the Great Depression.
But a spokesman for Ashton said the European Commission, which oversees trade policy in the 27-nation bloc, "is obliged to act when anti-dumping investigations show instances of unfair trade".

PRODUCERS HURT
According to the Official Journal, Chinese candles and non-alloy steel wire rods were being "dumped" in the EU -- exported at a price less than the price charged in its home market or below the costs of production.
Brussels launched its probe after complaints from European producers who said they were being hurt by Chinese exporters getting an unfair edge because of export aid, cheap raw material and illegal pricing which has led to a trade deficit with China which ballooned to 160 billion euros in 2007.

china.jpegChina routinely denies it breaks trade rules and says Europe resorts to protectionism against its low-cost advantage.
The decision to impose duties on candles has also angered major European retailers and churches ahead of the highly lucrative Christmas period.

The British Retail Consortium, representing companies such as Tesco , ASDA [ASDAP.UL] and John Lewis [JLP.UL], described Saturday's move as "worrying".

"The EU must show some sensitivity and understanding of the impact of the global recession on hard-pressed customers before Christmas," Alisdair Gray, BRC Director, said.

But Ashton's spokesman dismissed the move's impact on Christmas revenues.
"Fortunately, in the case of candles, all indications are that the Christmas trade will not be affected due to the early ordering of stock before the duties come into play," spokesman Peter Power said.

Following the completion of Brussels' full investigation, EU member states must vote in six months time on whether to impose so-called "definitive" duties lasting five years. (Editing by Patrick Graham)


Original story