China replaces rare earth quotas with export permits


China has instituted a system of export permits for rare earth metals, used in hi-tech goods such as mobile phones, the government said, with state-run media describing the move as an abolition of export quotas. China accounts for over 90 percent of global production of rare earths, a term covering 18 metals vital for the production of smartphones, hybrid car batteries, wind turbines, steel and low-energy light bulbs. Export permits will be required, but will be issued whenever a valid trade contract is presented, the ministry of commerce said in a statement last week. At the same time, officials abolished a quota system at the centre of a World Trade Organization (WTO) case, the government-run Shanghai Securities News reported Monday. Total Chinese exports never reached the quota limit, but it lost the long-running dispute when the WTO ruled in August that the system violated global trade rules. The United States, the European Union and Japan had complained that China was limiting exports in a bid to drive up prices. The complaint also said the quota was designed to gain a market advantage for domestic producers with cheaper access to the raw materials. Meanwhile, China has abolished price controls on tobacco leaf, the last agricultural product to have limits, the country's top economic planner said as authorities seek to give the market a greater economic role. But tobacco leaf prices are only a small factor in the cost of cigarettes - a state monopoly in China - so the move is unlikely to have a significant effect on smokers. China is the world's biggest cigarette market and government efforts to curb smoking have only had limited impact. Tobacco was among 24 commodities and services whose cost controls were removed, the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) said at the weekend, with others including railway bulk cargo, parcels, passenger transport and explosives for civilian use. The move comes more than a year after Communist Party leaders pledged to give the market a "decisive" role in resource allocation at a key meeting known as the Third Plenum. China's economy stagnated under decades of state control, but reforms brought in starting under Deng Xiaoping have seen it enjoy an unprecedented boom.