Vietnam Urges EU To End Tariffs On Leather Shoes
Vietnam on Tuesday criticized the European Union's continued antidumping tariffs on some shoes, saying they would hit 500,000 workers in the Southeast Asian country's footwear industry.
The European Commission has effectively continued two-year-old levies of 10% on leather-capped shoes from Vietnam, and 16.5% for such shoes from China, which had been due to expire Tuesday.
The tariffs stay in place while the commission reviews whether the shoes are below-cost imports, aided by unfair state subsidies, that hurt European shoe makers concentrated in Italy, Portugal and Spain.
Vietnam's Deputy Industry and Trade Minister Nguyen Thanh Bien said the decisions had an "adverse impact" on Vietnamese shoemakers and European importers and customers, speaking with the state-run Vietnam News Agency.
"Vietnam is disappointed with the decision," he was quoted as saying.
Bien urged a "fair and swift" review to "help enterprises from both sides to stabilize their production and business and give E.U. customers the chance to buy Vietnam-made leather-capped shoes at reasonable prices."
The Vietnamese footwear industry has suffered a sharp revenue drop from exports to the E.U. market over the past two years, he said.
The European Commission has effectively continued two-year-old levies of 10% on leather-capped shoes from Vietnam, and 16.5% for such shoes from China, which had been due to expire Tuesday.
The tariffs stay in place while the commission reviews whether the shoes are below-cost imports, aided by unfair state subsidies, that hurt European shoe makers concentrated in Italy, Portugal and Spain.
Vietnam's Deputy Industry and Trade Minister Nguyen Thanh Bien said the decisions had an "adverse impact" on Vietnamese shoemakers and European importers and customers, speaking with the state-run Vietnam News Agency.
"Vietnam is disappointed with the decision," he was quoted as saying.
Bien urged a "fair and swift" review to "help enterprises from both sides to stabilize their production and business and give E.U. customers the chance to buy Vietnam-made leather-capped shoes at reasonable prices."
The Vietnamese footwear industry has suffered a sharp revenue drop from exports to the E.U. market over the past two years, he said.

