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The United States won a World Trade Organization (WTO) ruling on Thursday against China’s use of tariff-rate quotas for rice, wheat and corn, which it successfully argued limited market access for U.S. grain exports.

The case, lodged by the Obama administration in late 2016, marked the second U.S. victory in as many months. It came amid U.S.-China trade talks and on the heels of Washington clinching a WTO ruling on China’s price support for grains in March.

A WTO dispute panel ruled on Thursday that under the terms of its 2001 WTO accession, China’s administration of the tariff rate quotas (TRQs) as a whole violated its obligation to administer them on a “transparent, predictable and fair basis.”

TRQs are two-level tariffs, with a limited volume of imports allowed at the lower in-quota tariff and subsequent imports charged an out-of-quota tariff, which is usually much higher.

The administration of state trading enterprises and non-state enterprises’ portions of TRQs are inconsistent with WTO rules, the panel said.

Australia, Brazil, India, and the European Union were among those reserving their rights in the dispute brought by the world’s largest grain exporter.

In a statement, U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue welcomed the decision, saying China’s system “ultimately inhibits TRQs from filling, denying U.S. farmers access to China’s market for grain.”

If China’s TRQs had been fully used, US$3.5-billion worth of corn, wheat and rice would have been imported in 2015 alone, it said, citing U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates.

The two WTO rulings would help American farmers “compete on a more level playing field,” the U.S. Trade Representative statement said, adding: “The [Trump] Administration will continue to press China to promptly come into compliance with its WTO obligations.”

The latest WTO panel said the United States had not proved all of its case, failing to show that China had violated its public notice obligation under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade in respect to TRQs.

There was no immediate reaction from China.

Either side can appeal the ruling within 60 days.

This content appears as provided to The Globe by the originating wire service. It has not been edited by Globe staff.

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