On September 15, 2020, a World Trade Organization (WTO) panel ruled that certain tariffs the United States imposed on Chinese products violated Articles I (most-favored-nation) and II (tariff bindings) of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT). The panel rejected the U.S. attempt to invoke a “public morals” defense pursuant to GATT Article XX, holding that although countries receive substantial deference in defining “public morals,” the United States failed to prove that the tariffs were necessary to achieve its stated public morals objective.
Over the past few years, the United States has engaged in an escalating trade war with China over China's trade practices.Footnote 1 On August 14, 2017, President Donald Trump ordered the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) to determine whether to “investigate any of China's laws, policies, practices, or actions that may be unreasonable or discriminatory and that may be harming American intellectual property rights, innovation, or technology development.”Footnote 2 Acting under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974, the USTR investigated and published a report detailing its observations on a wide range of issues, including investment, technology transfer, intellectual property theft, and competition practices.Footnote 3 On June 20, 2018, the United States imposed a 25 percent tariff on a list of Chinese imports (List 1 tariffs),Footnote 4 and then on September 21, 2018, it instituted a 10 percent tariff on additional Chinese imports (List 2 tariffs), later increasing the List 2 tariffs to 25 percent on May 10, 2019.Footnote 5
Invoking the Understanding on Rules and Procedures Governing the Settlement of Disputes (DSU), China requested consultations with the United States, which ultimately failed to resolve the dispute,Footnote 6 and then requested the establishment of a WTO panel.Footnote 7 The panel circulated its findings on September 15, 2020.Footnote 8
After disposing of two procedural objections made by the United States, the panel examined whether the tariffs were consistent with the GATT. China argued,Footnote 9 and the United States did not contest,Footnote 10 that the tariffs were inconsistent with Articles I:1 and II:1(a) and (b) of the GATT. The panel agreed that China established a prima facie violation of Article I:1 because the tariffs placed the covered Chinese products at a disadvantage compared to non-Chinese products.Footnote 11 The panel further concluded that the tariffs were inconsistent with Article II:1(a) and (b), which prohibit the imposition of customs duties in excess of the general Schedule rates and the Schedule rates agreed upon for certain products.Footnote 12 The panel held that the tariffs were inconsistent with Article II:1(a) because they “accord imports from China ‘less favourable treatment’ than that provided in the United States’ Schedule”Footnote 13 and also inconsistent with Article II:1(b) because they were “ordinary customs duties applied in excess of the rates to which the United States bound itself in its Schedule.”Footnote 14
The main U.S. defense centered on its argument that the tariffs were lawfully imposed as measures “necessary to protect US public morals pursuant to Article XX(a) of the GATT 1994.”Footnote 15 The United States argued that China's actions, described in the Section 301 report, violated U.S. laws, including “the prohibition of theft, extortion, cyber-enabled theft and cyber-hacking, economic espionage and the misappropriation of trade secrets, anti-competitive behaviour, as well as the regulation of governmental takings of property.”Footnote 16 These practices, the United States explained, threaten U.S. “political and social institutions.”Footnote 17 The United States argued that the laws prohibiting unfair trade practices codify restrictions on behavior based on “national concepts of right and wrong,” and China's acts, policies, and practices violate these concepts.Footnote 18
In evaluating the U.S. argument, the panel articulated a three-step test for assessing invocations of a “public morals” defense: (1) “whether the claimed policy is a ‘public morals’ objective within the meaning of Article XX(a)”; (2) “whether the measure is ‘designed’ to protect that public morals objective”; and (3) whether the measure is “necessary” to the protection of public morals.Footnote 19
The panel accepted the U.S. claim that the values invoked implicated “public morals.” The panel defined public morals broadly, as “a set of habits of life relating to right and wrong conduct (i.e. societal values) that belong to, affect or concern a community or a nation.”Footnote 20 The panel concluded that the “standards of right and wrong,” as characterized by the United States, “could, at least at a conceptual level, be covered by the term ‘public morals’ within the meaning of Article XX(a) of the GATT 1994.”Footnote 21
The panel was equivocal about whether the measures were “designed” to achieve the stated public morals objective,Footnote 22 but it rejected the U.S. position on the “necessity” requirement.Footnote 23 The panel began with the three factors “traditionally assessed” when determining necessity: the importance of the pursued policy objective; the restrictive impact of the measures on trade; and the contribution of the measures to the pursued objective.Footnote 24 The panel granted that the United States considered its objective “important,”Footnote 25 but found that the tariffs still had “significant effects on international trade.”Footnote 26
On the final factor of contribution, the panel stated that “contribution exists ‘when there is a genuine relationship of ends and means between the objective pursued and the measure at issue.’”Footnote 27 The United States asserted that the tariffs create additional costs that diminish China's incentive to continue its practices, while also reducing “the incentive for US actors to engage in similar practices.”Footnote 28
The panel noted that the United States had the burden of proving a sufficient relationship between the tariffs and public morals.Footnote 29 The United States argued that there was a “clear and direct relationship” between the products covered by the List 1 tariffs and the Chinese actions highlighted in the Section 301 report.Footnote 30 The panel examined the Notices the United States had issued listing products to be covered by the tariffs, but found that neither the Notices themselves, nor the Section 301 Report, supported a finding of contribution.Footnote 31 The panel emphasized that the types of products covered by the List 1 tariffs, and the practices addressed in the Section 301 Report, did not seem strongly related.Footnote 32
The panel also suggested that U.S. use of a process to exclude certain products initially included in List 1 undermined its claim that the tariffs contributed to the public morals goal.Footnote 33 After initially publishing List 1, the United States permitted interested persons to request that certain products be excluded from the list.Footnote 34 Exclusions from the tariffs depended on three factors: the availability of the product from countries other than China; economic harm to the requestor or “other US interests”; and the strategic importance or relationship of that product to Chinese industrial programs.Footnote 35 The panel noted that the first two factors “clearly pertain to economic considerations,” and the third factor's purpose was ambiguous.Footnote 36 The panel concluded that “the United States has not sufficiently explained why products that were initially considered to benefit from China's practices and policies . . . are excluded from the additional duties and how such exclusions do not undermine the achievement of the public morals objective as invoked by the United States.”Footnote 37
The panel further concluded that the United States had not sufficiently explained the relationship between the List 2 tariffs and its public morals objective.Footnote 38 Although the United States argued that the tariffs increased the economic pressure on China to alter its practices,Footnote 39 the panel observed that the covered products extended beyond the scope of the Section 301 report.Footnote 40 The panel also noted that the procedure for excluding products from List 2 mirrored the procedure followed for List 1, except that it included an additional economic consideration as a basis for exclusion.Footnote 41 These facts ultimately led the panel to conclude that the United States failed to adequately show the relationship between the List 2 tariffs and its public morals objective.Footnote 42
In light of its determination that the United States failed to properly justify the tariffs under Article XX(a), the panel ruled that the tariffs were inconsistent with the GATT and recommended that the United States return to compliance with its obligations.Footnote 43
U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer criticized the panel ruling, stating:
This panel report confirms what the Trump Administration has been saying for four years: The WTO is completely inadequate to stop China's harmful technology practices. . . . Although the panel did not dispute the extensive evidence submitted by the United States of intellectual property theft by China, its decision shows that the WTO provides no remedy for such misconduct.Footnote 44
By contrast, Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Wang Wenbin praised the WTO, stating that “China always firmly supports and upholds the multilateral trading system with the WTO at its core, and respects its rules and rulings,” and adding China's “hope that the US side will fully respect the ruling of the WTO panel.”Footnote 45
On October 26, the United States appealed the panel decision.Footnote 46 The filing of an appeal stays the adoption of the panel report by the WTO's Dispute Settlement Body.Footnote 47 However, because the United States has blocked appointment of new WTO Appellate Body members since 2017 in an effort to force reforms,Footnote 48 the Appellate Body currently lacks the three members required to constitute a panel to review decisions.Footnote 49 The absence of a functioning Appellate Body means that the U.S. appeal effectively blocks adoption of the panel report indefinitely. The U.S. notice of appeal states that “[t]he United States will confer with China so the parties may determine the way forward in this dispute.”Footnote 50 Pointing to the paralysis of the Appellate Body, China characterized the appeal as an “abuse of procedural rules.”Footnote 51