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TRADE WARS
EU slaps anti-dumping duty on mandarins from China
by Staff Writers
Brussels (AFP) Feb 22, 2013


European Union imports of tinned mandarin products from China were hit by a special anti-dumping duty on Friday to protect producers in Europe with high production costs.

The decision to re-impose a duty on prepared or preserved manadrin products such as tangerines, satsumas and clementines was agreed Tuesday by EU ministers. The duty will vary from 361.4 euros a tonne to 531.2 euros and will remain in force until the end of the year.

The main EU producer, Copa-Cogeca, welcomed the move while regretting it was not applied retroactively to the start of the season, in November-December 2012.

"These imports do not have to respect the same costly rules and obligations and food safety standards as those applied in the EU there are huge production and labour cost differentials," said its secretary-general Pekka Pesonen.

He said in a statement that production costs in the EU reach 11-12 euros a kilo (FOB) while comparable Chinese production costs total 6.30 euros.

"We are now already towards the end of February and this regulation was agreed quite late in the season," he added.

"If these measures are not introduced with a retroactive effect from the start of the 2012/3 marketing year, the regulation will have much less impact.

"Copa-Cogeca therefore urges the EU Commission to apply them retroactively, otherwise the whole processed citrus fruit sector will be put at risk and competitivity and jobs in rural areas, especially in southern countries which are already suffering a severe recession, will be threatened", he warned.

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TRADE WARS
Hong Kong unveils new bid to cool property market
Hong Kong (AFP) Feb 22, 2013
Hong Kong unveiled fresh measures Friday to cool its red-hot property market, as the finance minister warned that an asset bubble is forming in the southern Chinese city. Property prices in the Asian financial hub, famous for its sky-high rent, have surged over the past few years due to record low interest rates and a flood of wealthy people from mainland China snapping up homes. The gov ... read more


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