[PHNOM PENH POST]
World Trade Organization officials have urged Cambodia to implement a
trade remedy law to curb unfair competition from foreign products.
Such
a law would significantly protect the Kingdom from foreign exporters
who undercut domestic prices – a tactic known as price dumping – World
Trade Organisat-ion Rules Division counsell-or Müslüm Yilmaz said at a
workshop on trade remedies in Phnom Penh yesterday.
“I think it’s
important for a country like Cambodia to consider this to prevent the
Kingdom’s industries suffering the injuries caused by dumping imposed by
other countries,” Yilmaz said.
Cambodia would be able to monitor the effects of price dumping once a trade remedy law was in place, he said.
“Until the legislation is passed, it’s impossible for Cambodia to conduct an investigation and take measures.”
A
number of countries in the region, such as Thailand, Malaysia and
Indonesia, already had trade remedy laws, but it was not an obligation
of WTO members, Yilmaz said.
Although the law was not a WTO
requirement, it was essential for Cambodia to have it in place, Ministry
of Commerce Secretary of State Pan Sorasak said.
“We need to
have this law to protect ourselves from these problems, which are likely
to occur when the price of any goods varies dramatically.”
Pan
Sorasak said the government planned to pass a single law including three
main components: countervailing measures, dumping measures and
safeguard measures.
“We plan to pass it as soon as possible,
containing a vis-ion on anti-dumping that will allow us to take up
countervailing measures later.
“Although we still have much work to do to complete the draft, we clearly understand the challenges.”
Cambodia
Chamber of Commerce director-general Ngoun Meng Tech objected to the
approval of the law, saying: “In a free-market economy, the government
cannot set up or ban the price of products.”
“If the government
wants to prevent this kind of dumping, it should urge domestic producers
to produce cheap, quality products to compete with imported ones,”
Ngoun Meng Tech said.
He added that when prices dropped people
could afford certain products, but said the government was not
interes-ted in consumers.
“It merely protects businessmen, not normal consumers who want quality products at a cheap price.”
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