Anti-dumping duties on Vietnamese fish too high
Over the last few years, firms
exporting Vietnamese basa and tra fish fillets to the US
have faced severe problems due to a sudden increase in anti-dumping duties.
At these rates, the Vietnamese exporters will find it increasingly difficult
to export to the US market. Dharmendra N. Choudhary, a Washington DC-based
international trade attorney with the law firm GDLSK LLP, speaks about the
reasons behind the change.
Why has the Department of Commerce
insisted on selecting Indonesia as surrogate country for Viet Nam? What
are the main causes and objectives? As a surrogate value expert, how do you
evaluate the Department of Commerce’s actions in relation to
Vietnamese fish exporters?
For a long time, Bangladesh was
consistently selected as the surrogate country from a list of six potential
surrogate country choices circulated by the Office of Policy of Commerce at
the beginning of each proceeding.
Very significantly, in these
proceedings, Indonesia was not only one of the available surrogate country
choices, but also the one for which the US domestic industry vigorously
argued. Even then, commerce had all along preferred Bangladesh over Indonesia.
After losing the issue again in
2013, the US domestic industry brought to bear significant pressure on
commerce to reject Bangladesh and select Indonesia, a significantly advanced
country with higher costs of inputs. Their main motivation for Indonesia was obviously
to achieve a higher anti-dumping duty rate.
In order to discredit Bangladesh,
the US domestic industry directed their attack against the strongest data in
Bangladesh - the price for the main input - whole fish - published by the
department of agriculture marketing (DAM data).
However, the Department of
Commerce faced a major legal hurdle in selecting Indonesia in the eighth
review since Indonesia had just been removed from the list of potential
surrogate countries that were deemed “economically comparable” to Việt
Nam based on per capita GNI data. On account of its very high GNI,
Indonesia was no longer economically comparable to Việt Nam. Consequently,
under US law, the Department of Commerce was precluded from
selecting Indonesia as the surrogate country. This is because
the Department of Commerce is mandated by law and settled practice
to select only an economically comparable country (except in exceptional
situations, that is, when none of the six countries provides it with usable
price data).
In course of my several trips to
Bangladesh, I had extensively interacted with many senior fisheries officials
and obtained with great difficulty several signed official letters from
Bangladeshi dam officials demonstrating that dam data was exclusively for
whole live pond grown pangasius hypophthalmus fish only, the exact type of
fish used in Việt Nam for producing the fish fillets. Even so, commerce
rejected the dam data relying on unsupported affidavits provided by the US
domestic industry’s paid consultants. We are challenging all these decisions
in the US court of international trade.
In subsequent antidumping reviews,
the Department of Commerce has simply followed its decision from
eighth administrative review, overlooking the threshold question that Indonesia
continues to be economically nom-comparable to Việt Nam.
We strongly believe that
the Department of Commerce has erred in rejecting the DAM data, and
consequently preferring Indonesia over Bangladesh. We are challenging all
these decisions in court and hope for a favourable outcome.
How important is the US
International trade Court’s recent ruling that it’s Bangladesh, not Indonesia
that should be taken as surrogate country for Việt Nam’s case? Is it a final
decision ? Is there any possibility that the Department of Commerce would
appeal this decision?
The court’s recent decision in the
seventh administrative review appeal affirms the reliability of Bangladeshi
DAM data. The court underscored the value of the dam official’s letters that
affirmed that dam data was exclusively for live fish. Accordingly, the court
affirmed the reliability of DAM data and, consequently, the choice of
Bangladesh as the surrogate country. This decision is very significant in the
sense that it has shut out any lingering doubts about the reliability of DAM
data.
The court of international trade has
issued its final decision. This decision could theoretically be challenged
before the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (i.e. CAFC).
In this litigation, the Department
of Commerce is on our side so any decision to appeal rests with US fish
industries. They still have time to file an appeal before the CAFC. But,
given that the opinion issued by court of international trade is on a factual
issue instead of a point of law, there is not a great chance of this decision
being reversed.
I also argued before the court in
the appeal filed against commerce’s final results in the ninth review
recently. The court’s order is expected shortly and we expect the court to
remand the surrogate country issue to commerce for a fresh consideration.
Is Bangladesh an acceptable
surrogate country for Việt Nam? With your long and vast experience, how
do you evaluate the situation? And, what are your suggestions for Viet Nam’s
Government, exporters, and US importers and consumers?
Bangladesh continues to be on the list of potential surrogate countries issued by
the Department of Commerce’s office of policy. Bangladesh still provides
reliable DAMprice data, as well as price data for other inputs. Of course, the
anti-dumping proceedings are dynamic, and the facts vary from one period of
review to another. Bangladesh is, by no means, a 100% perfect choice – no
country is perfect on every issue. But, I believe that Bangladesh continues to
be superior to all other countries on the list under a totality of
circumstances test.
The Việt Nam Government and
exporters, in concert with US importers, should continue to support all
efforts to obtain the best surrogate value data from the listed surrogate
countries and to work to discredit Indonesia. They also must support law
suits in the US federal courts to overturn the doc’s current preference for
Indonesia over other surrogate countries, which are economically comparable
to Vietnam.
From March 2016, Việt Nam’s fish
exports has entered an 18 months transition period. How difficult is this to
Vietnam fish exporter? Do you think this non-tariff barrier is legal under
current US-Vietnam trade mechanism and agreements?
The new USDA- food safety and
inspection service (FSIS) equivalency standards and nationwide inspection and
certification regime adds a new obstacle to the free and fair trade. It is
widely believed that the leading Vietnamese processors and exporters already
follow globally accepted manufacturing practices.
The USDA-FSIS equivalency programme,
however, is extremely complex and must be implemented through new laws and
regulations adopted by the Vietnamese Government, which must be adopted and
followed by each processor. The USDA must also certify the country and
individual processors before they will permit entry of fish fillets.
This will require significant changes in the way the factories control and
inspect inputs, processing and their HACCP plans.
Since the same equivalency and
certification requirement is also applicable to US domestic producers, there
may not be a violation of WTO’s national treatment rule. However, it is still
being examined as to whether the new regulations are in violation of the WTO
phytosanitary agreement. No definitive word on that for now.
As you suggest that this is a long
fight, what are your suggestions for Việt Nam exporters and US consumers to
ensure their own interests prevail?
The Vietnamese processors and
Government must work in concert to implement the new USDA-FSIS regulations.
US importers and US consumer forums should also be a part of this new push by
the Vietnamese Government. - VNS
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Thứ Sáu, 6 tháng 5, 2016
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