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ANTI-DUMPING
1. What is anti dumping?
What is its purpose in International Trade?
Dumping is said to occur when the goods are exported
by a country to another country at a price lower than
its normal value. This is an unfair trade practice which
can have a distortive effect on international trade.
Anti dumping is a measure to rectify the situation arising
out of the dumping of goods and its trade distortive
effect. Thus, the purpose of anti dumping duty is to
rectify the trade distortive effect of dumping and re-establish
fair trade. The use of anti dumping measure as an instrument
of fair competition is permitted by the WTO. In fact,
anti dumping is an instrument for ensuring fair trade
and is not a measure of protection per se for the domestic
industry. It provides relief to the domestic industry
against the injury caused by dumping.
2. Does dumping mean cheap or
low priced imports ?
Often, dumping is
mistaken and simplified to mean cheap or low priced
imports. However, it is a misunderstanding of the term.
On the other hand, dumping, in its legal sense, means
export of goods by a country to another country at a
price lower than its normal value. Thus, dumping implies
low priced imports only in the relative sense (relative
to the normal value), and not in absolute sense.
Import of cheap products through illegal
trade channels like smuggling do not fall within the
purview of anti-dumping measures.
3. Is anti dumping
a measure of protection for domestic industry?
Anti dumping, in common parlance, is understood as
a measure of protection for domestic industry. However,
anti dumping measures do not provide protection per
se to the domestic industry. It only serves the purpose
of providing remedy to the domestic industry against
the injury caused by the unfair trade practice of dumping.
In fact, anti dumping is a trade remedial measure to
counteract the trade distortion caused by dumping and
the consequential injury to the domestic industry. Only
in this sense, it can be seen as a protective measure.
It can never be regarded as a protectionist measure.
4.What is the difference
between anti dumping duty and Normal Customs duty? Is
the anti dumping duty over and above the Normal Customs
duty chargeable on the import of an item?
Although anti dumping duty is levied
and collected by the Customs Authorities, it is entirely
different from the Customs duties not only in concept
and substance, but also in purpose and operation. The
following are the main differences between the two:
-
- Conceptually, anti dumping
and the like measures in their essence are linked
to the notion of fair trade. The object of these duties
is to guard against the situation arising out of unfair
trade practices while customs duties are there as
a means of raising revenue and for overall development
of the economy.
- Customs duties fall in the
realm of trade and fiscal policies of the Government
while anti dumping and anti subsidy measures are there
as trade remedial measures.
- The object of anti dumping
and allied duties is to offset the injurious effect
of international price discrimination while customs
duties have implications for the government revenue
and for overall development of the economy.
- Anti dumping duties are not
necessarily in the nature of a tax measure inasmuch
as the Authority is empowered to suspend these duties
in case of an exporter offering a price undertaking.
Thus such measures are not always in the form of duties/tax.
- Anti dumping and anti subsidy
duties are levied against exporter / country in as
much as they are country specific and exporter specific
as against the customs duties which are general and
universally applicable to all imports irrespective
of the country of origin and the exporter.
Thus, there are basic conceptual and
operational differences between the customs duty and
the anti dumping duty. The anti dumping duty is levied
over and above the normal customs duty chargeable on
the import of goods in question.
5. What are the
parameters used to assess dumping of goods from a country?
Dumping means export of goods by one country / territory
to the market of another country / territory at a price
lower than the normal value. If the export price is
lower than the normal value, it constitutes dumping.
Thus, there are two fundamental parameters used for
determination of dumping, namely, the normal value and
the export price. Both these elements have to be compared
at the same level of trade, generally at ex-factory
level, for assessment of dumping.
6. How do you define:
- Normal Value
- Export price and
- dumping margin
A. Normal Value: Normal value
is the comparable price at which the goods under complaint
are sold, in the ordinary course of trade, in the domestic
market of the exporting country.
If the normal value can not be determined
by means of the domestic sales, the following two alternative
methods may be employed to determine the normal value:
-
- Comparable representative
export price to an appropriate third country.
- Constructed normal value,
i.e. the cost of production in the country of origin
with reasonable addition for administrative, selling
and general costs and reasonable profits.
B. Export price: The Export price
of the goods allegedly dumped into India means the price
at which it is exported to India. It is generally the
CIF value minus the adjustments on account of ocean
freight, insurance, commission, etc. so as to arrive
at the value at ex-factory level.
- Dumping Margin:
The margin of dumping is the difference between the
Normal value and the export price of the goods under
complaint. It is generally expressed as a percentage
of the export price.
Illustration: Normal value US$
110 per kg.
Export price US$ 100 per kg.
There is dumping in this case as export
price is lower than normal value and dumping margin
in this case is US$ 10 per kg., i.e. 10% of the export
price.
Dumping is a function of two variables, namely Normal
Value and Export Price, which must be compared at the
same level of trade i.e. at the ex-factory level.
7. What are the
essential requisites for initiating an anti dumping
investigation?
The following are essential for initiating
an anti dumping investigation: -
a)Sufficient evidence
to the effect that ;
b)there is dumping
- there is injury to the domestic
industry; and
- there is a causal link between
the dumping and the injury, that is to say, that the
dumped imports have caused the alleged injury.
(c) The domestic producers expressly
supporting the anti dumping application must account
for not less than 25% of the total production of the
like article by the domestic industry.
The application is deemed to have been
made by or on behalf of the domestic industry, if it
is supported by those domestic producers whose collective
output constitute more than 50% of the total production
of the like article produced by that portion of the
domestic industry expressing either support for or opposition
as the case may be, to the application.
Note: This is to further clarify that
a domestic industry, which seeks relief, should give
sufficient evidence with respect to the above parameters.
Unless the above parameters are satisfied, it will not
be possible for the Authority to initiate an anti-dumping
investigation.
8. What are the
parameters of injury to the domestic industry?
Broadly, injury may be analysed in terms of the volume
effect and price effect of the dumped imports. The parameters
by which injury to the domestic industry is to be assessed
in the anti dumping proceedings are such economic indicators
having a bearing upon the state of industry as the magnitude
of dumping, and the decline in sales, selling price,
profits, market share, production, utilisation of capacity
etc.
9. What is the
Non-injurious Price and injury margin? How these are
worked out?
Non-Injurious Price (NIP) is that level
of price, which the industry is, expected to have charged
under normal circumstances in the Indian market during
the Period defined. This price would have enabled reasonable
recovery of cost of production and profit after nullifying
adverse impact of those factors of production which
could have adversely effected the company and for which
dumped imports can’t be held responsible.
Besides the calculation of the margin
of dumping, the Designated Authority also calculates
the Injury Margin for the Domestic Industry. The Injury
Margin is the difference between the Non-Injurious Price
due to the Domestic Industry and the Landed Value of
the dumped imports.
Landed Value for this purpose is taken
as the assessable value under the Customs Act and the
applicable basic Customs duties except CVD, SAD and
special duties.
For calculating Non-Injurious Price,
the Authority calls for costing information from the
domestic industry in the prescribed proforma for the
period of investigations and for three previous years.
Accounting records maintained on the basis of Generally
Acceptable Accounting Principle (GAAP) form the basis
for estimating Non-Injurious Price. In the estimation
of Non-Injurious Price for the Domestic Industry, the
Authority makes appropriate analysis of all relevant
factors like usage of raw material, usage of utilities,
captive consumption etc. and the actual expanses during
the Period of Investigation including the investments,
the capacity utilisation etc. The Non-Injurious Price
for Domestic Industry is determined considering the
reasonable return on the capital employed.
10. How is causal
link established between dumping and injury to the domestic
industry?
In the anti dumping proceedings, it is
imperative to prove that the dumping has caused injury
to the domestic industry. No anti dumping duty shall
be recommended without a finding of this causal relationship.
That is to say,
DUMPING should lead to INJURY
The causal link is to be established
generally in terms of the following effects of dumped
imports on domestic industry: -
a. volume effect
b.price effect
The volume effect of dumping relates
to the market share of the domestic industry vis-ŕ-vis
the dumped imports from the subject country/ies while
with regard to the price effect, the Designated Authority
shall consider whether there has been a significant
price under cutting by the dumped imports as compared
with the price of the like product in India, or whether
the effect of such imports is otherwise to depress prices
to a significant degree or prevent price increase which
otherwise would have occurred to a significant degree.
11.In case anti
dumping duty is warranted after the investigation, what
is the extent of such duty to be recommended/imposed?
Under the WTO arrangement, the National Authorities
can impose duties upto the margin of dumping i.e. the
difference between the normal value and the export price.
The Indian law also provides that the anti dumping duty
to be recommended/levied shall not exceed the dumping
margin.
12.What is the minimum level of
imports (de-minimis margins) from a country and from
an individual exporter below which such exporter or
country is to be excluded from the scope of Anti Dumping
investigation/duties?
Individual exporter: Any exporter
whose margin of dumping is less than 2% of the export
price shall be excluded from the purview of anti-dumping
duties even if the existence of dumping, injury as well
as the causal link is established.
Country: Further, investigation
against any country is required to be terminated if
the volume of the dumped imports, actual or potential,
from a particular country accounts for less than 3%
of the total imports of the like product.
However, in such a case, the cumulative
imports of the like product from all these countries
who individually account for less than 3%, should not
exceed 7% of the import of the like product.
13.What is the relief/remedy to
the Domestic Industry under the Anti Dumping mechanism.
Is it always in the form of Anti-dumping duty?
The relief to the domestic industry against
dumping of goods from a particular country is in the
form of anti dumping duty imposed against that country/ies,
which could go upto the dumping margin. Such duties
are exporter specific and country specific.
However, the remedy against dumping is
not always in the form of anti dumping duty. The Authority
may terminate or suspend investigation after the preliminary
findings if the exporter concerned furnished an undertaking
to revise his price to remove the dumping or the injurious
effect of dumping as the case may be. No anti dumping
duty is recommended on such exporters from whom price
undertaking has been accepted.
14.What are other remedial measures
against unfair trade practices in addition to Anti Dumping?
How do they come into operation?
Apart from dumping, some of the countries
also resort to subsidisation of their exports to other
countries. Export subsidies, under the WTO agreement,
are treated as unfair trade practice and such subsidies
are actionable by way of levy of anti-subsidy countervailing
duty.
There is one more trade remedial measure
called "safeguards" which are applied as an emergency
measure in response to surge in imports of a particular
item.
- Anti subsidy countervailing
measure is in the form of countervailing duty which
is to be imposed only after the determination that:
- the subsidy is a specific
subsidy
- the subsidy relates to
export performance;
- the subsidy relates to
the use of domestic goods over imported goods
in the export article; or
- the subsidy has been conferred
on a limited number of persons engaged in manufacturing,
producing or exporting the article.
What is subsidy for this purpose?
A subsidy is said to exist;
(a) if there is a financial contribution
by the Government or any public body within the territory
of the exporting country, i.e. where-
- there is a direct transfer of funds(including
grants, loans and equity) by the Government;
- government revenue i.e. otherwise due is foregone
and not collected(including fiscal incentives, I.T.
exemption
- a government provides goods or services other
than general infrastructure;
(b) a government grants or maintains
any form of income or price support which operates directly
or indirectly to increase export of any article from
its territory.
What is not a subsidy?
- However the subsidy which is for research activities
conducted by the persons engaged in manufacture or
export or the subsidy which is for assistance to disadvantaged
regions with the territory of the exporting country
is not actionable. Thus, no countervailing duty is
to be levied on such subsidies.
- In anti subsidy countervailing investigation, the
Government of the exporting country/ies is a party
to the investigation in addition to the exporters
from these countries. The countervailing duty imposed
on the subsidised exports from a country shall not
exceed the amount of such subsidy/ies.
- In India the Designated Authority for anti dumping
is also the Authority for administering anti subsidy
countervailing measures.
What it Safeguards?
- Safeguards, on the other hand, are applied when
:
- there is a surge in imports of a particular product
irrespective of a particular country/ies and,
- it causes serious injury to the domestic
industry.
- Safeguard measures are applied to all imports of
the product in question irrespective of the countries
in which it originates or from which it is exported.
This aspect distinguishes Safeguards from anti dumping
and anti subsidy measures which are always country
specific and exporter specific.
- Safeguards are applied in the form of either safeguard
duty or in the form of safeguard QRs (import licenses).
These measures are administered in India by an Authority
called Director General (Safeguards) who functions
in the jurisdiction of the Department of Revenue,
Ministry of Finance.
15.What is the legal framework
for Anti Dumping, Anti Subsidy and safeguard measures?
Sections 9, 9 A, 9 B and 9 C of the Customs Tariff
Act, 1975 as amended in 1995 and the Customs Tariff
(Identification, Assessment and Collection of Anti-dumping
Duty on Dumped Articles and for Determination of Injury)
Rules, 1995 and Customs Tariff(Identification, Assessment
and Collection of Countervailing Duty on Subsidised
Articles and for Determination of Injury) Rules, 1995
framed thereunder form the legal basis for anti-dumping
and anti subsidy investigations and for the levy of
anti-dumping and countervailing duties. These laws are
in consonance with the WTO Agreements on Anti Dumping
and Anti Subsidy countervailing measures.
16.What is the institutional arrangement
in India for anti dumping, anti-subsidy and safeguard
action against unfair trade practices?
Anti dumping and anti subsidies &
countervailing measures in India are administered by
the Directorate General of Anti dumping and Allied Duties
(DGAD) functioning in the Dept. of Commerce in the Ministry
of Commerce and Industry and the same is headed by the
"Designated Authority". The Designated Authority’s function,
however, is only to conduct the anti dumping/anti subsidy
& countervailing duty investigation and make recommendation
to the Government for imposition of anti dumping or
anti subsidy measures. Such duty is finally imposed/levied
by a Notification of the Ministry of Finance. Thus,
while the Department of Commerce recommends the Anti-dumping
duty, it is the Ministry of Finance, which levies such
duty.
Safeguard measures, on the other hand,
are administered by another Authority namely, Director
General (Safeguard), which functions under the Dept.
of Revenue, Ministry of Finance. The Standing Board
of Safeguards (chaired by the Commerce Secretary) considers
the recommendations of the DG (Safeguards) and then
recommends the impositions of the Safeguard Duty as
it deems fit, to the Ministry of Finance which levies
the duty.
17. Who can make an application
for initiation of Anti Dumping investigation and imposition
of AD duty?
Applications can be made by or on behalf
of the concerned domestic industry to the Designated
Authority in the Dept. of Commerce for an investigation
into alleged dumping of a product into India. Under
the Rules a valid application can be made only by those
petitioners/domestic producers who expressly support
the application, and account for more than 25% of total
domestic production of the like article in question.
The application is deemed to have been
made by or on behalf of the domestic industry, if it
is supported by those domestic producers whose collective
output constitutes more than fifty percent of the total
production of the like article produced by that portion
of the domestic industry expressing either support for
or opposition as the case may be, to the application.
However, such producers may exclude those
who are related to the exporters or importers
of the alleged dumped article or are themselves importers
thereof. In other words, a domestic producer who
is related to the exporter or importer of the dumped
article or is himself an importer thereof, may not be
treated as part of the domestic industry even if he
files or supports an anti-dumping petition.
18. Who are the interested parties
to an anti dumping investigation?
The interested parties to an anti dumping
investigation include:
- the domestic industry on whose complaint the proceedings
are initiated;
- The exporters or the foreign producers of the like
articles subject to investigation;
- The importers of the same article allegedly dumped
into India;
- The Government of the exporting country/ countries.
- The trade or business associations of the domestic
producers/importers/user industries of the dumped
product.
19.Who all can appear in
Anti-dumping cases to represent the parties?
Any representative duly authorised by the petitioner/
interested parties/ Association etc. can appear in the
Anti-dumping cases to represent the concerned parties.
20.What are the essential conditions
for initiation of Anti Dumping investigation?
The Designated Authority shall not initiate an anti-dumping
investigation unless it receives a well-documented application/petition,
which should help it determine:
a) that the domestic producers/petitioners
filing the petition and/or expressly supporting the
petition account for at least 25% of total domestic
production of the like article in question.
The application is deemed to have been
made by or on behalf of the domestic industry, if it
is supported by those domestic producers whose collective
output constitutes more than fifty percent of the total
production of the like article produced by that portion
of the domestic industry expressing either support for
or opposition as the case may be, to the application;
and
b)that there is sufficient evidence furnished
by the petitioner/s regarding;
- Dumping of goods in question;
- Injury to the domestic industry; and
- A causal link between the dumped imports and alleged
injury to the domestic industry.
21.Can the Designated Authority
initiate Anti Dumping cases in respect of items suo-motu,
i.e. on its own, without a petition filed by the aggrieved
party ?
Normally speaking, the Designated Authority initiates
the proceedings for anti dumping action on the basis
of a petition received from the domestic industry alleging
dumping of certain goods and the injury caused to it
by such dumping. However, Rule 5(4) of the Anti Dumping
Rules provides for suo-motu initiation of anti dumping
proceedings by the Designated Authority on the basis
of information received from the Collector of Customs
appointed under the Customs Act, 1962 or from any other
source. In such circumstances, the Authority initiates
the anti dumping investigation on its own without any
complaint/petition filed in this regard, provided the
Authority is satisfied that sufficient evidence exists
as to the existence of dumping, injury and causal link
between the dumped imports and the alleged injury. It
is further clarified that after initiation, the suo-motu
investigation follows the same procedure as the one
based on a petition as mentioned in the Anti Dumping
Rules.
22.What is the information required
to be submitted by the Domestic Industry for Anti Dumping
proceedings?
An application for investigation into
any alleged dumping filed by the aggrieved domestic
industry must contain sufficient evidence (like
Bill of Entry, Invoices, letter from the Indian Mission
in the subject country/ies, data from secondary sources
like specialized commodity journals etc.) as to the
existence of dumping in relation to the goods imported
from the subject country/ies and the fact that such
dumped imports are causing or threatening to cause material
injury to the Indian Industry producing the like goods
or are materially retarding the establishment of an
industry.
Further, the information relating to
the standing of the petitioner/s as domestic industry
(Please see the answer to Q.2) must be contained in
the anti dumping application.
The application containing the requisite
information for the proceedings must be made in the
prescribed format devised by the Directorate General
of Anti Dumping and Allied Duties and available in the
said Directorate. Guidelines for filling in the application
proforma and for completing the prescribed questionnaire
are formulated and incorporated in a user-friendly manner
in the application proforma itself.
23.What is the period to which
the information will relate; that is to say what is Period
of Investigation in anti-dumping cases?
All the information and evidence furnished
in the application in relation to dumping, injury and
causal link must pertain to a definite period which
is called the period of investigation. Broadly, there
are indications that such period should not be, in any
case, less than six months and not more than eighteen
months. It is, however, important that the period taken
into consideration for detailed investigation into dumping
and injury should be as representative and as recent
as possible. The most desirable period of investigation
is a financial year provided there is reasonable proximity
between the end of the financial year and the filing
of the application.
However, for the purposes of injury analysis,
the domestic industry has to furnish the relevant data
for the past three years.
24. What are the
various stages of the investigation process?
An Application received by the Designated
Authority is dealt with in the following manner:
A. Preliminary Screening:
The application is scrutinized to ensure
that it is fully documented and provides sufficient
evidence for initiating an investigation. If the evidence
is not adequate, then a deficiency letter is issued.
Unless the deficiencies are rectified, the submission
made before the Authority can not be construed as an
application pending before the Authority .
B. Initiation:
Designated Authority determines that
the application has been made by or on behalf of the
Domestic Industry. It also examines the accuracy and
adequacy of the evidence provided in the application
and when satisfied that there is sufficient evidence
regarding dumping, injury and causal link, a public
notice is issued initiating an investigation.
The Initiation notice will be issued
normally within 5 days from the date of receipt of a
properly documented application.
C. Access to Information:
The Authority provides access to the
non-confidential evidence presented to it by various
interested parties in the form of a public file, which
is available for inspection to all interested parties
on request after receipt of the responses.
D. Preliminary Findings:
The Designated Authority will proceed
expeditiously with the conduct of the investigation
and shall, in appropriate cases, make a preliminary
finding containing the detailed information on the main
reasons behind the determination. The preliminary finding
will normally be made within 60-70 days from the date
of initiation.
E. Provisional Duty:
A provisional duty not exceeding the
margin of dumping may be imposed by the Central Government
on the basis of the preliminary finding recorded by
the Designated Authority.
The provisional duty can be imposed only
after the expiry of 60 days from the date of initiation
of investigation.
The provisional duty will remain in force
only for a period not exceeding 6 months, extendable
to 9 months under certain circumstances.
F. Oral Evidence & Public Hearing:
Interested parties who participate in
the investigations can request the Designated Authority
for an opportunity to present the relevant information
orally. However, such oral information shall be taken
into consideration only when it is subsequently reproduced
in writing. The Authority may grant oral hearing anytime
during the course of the investigation.
Besides the above, the Authority holds
a public hearing inviting all interested parties to
make their submissions before it. All oral submissions
made during the hearing need to be reproduced in writing
for the Authority to take the same on board.
G. Disclosure of information:
Based on these submissions and evidence
gathered during the investigation and verification thereof,
the Authority will determine the basis of its final
findings. However, the Designated Authority will inform
all interested parties of the essential facts, which
form the basis for its decision before the final finding
is made.
H. Final Determination:
The interested parties submit their response
to the disclosure and the final position of the Authority
taken therein. The Authority examines these final submissions
of the parties and comes out with final findings.
I. Time-limit for Investigation Process
Normal time allowed by the statute for
conclusion of investigation and submission of final
findings is one year from the date of initiation of
the investigation. The above period may be extended
by the Central Government by 6 months.
25. Are the interested parties
to the investigation given sufficient opportunity to
represent their case before the Authority?
The anti dumping proceedings being quasi
judicial in nature, the Designated Authority meticulously
follows the norms of natural justice before making the
final recommendation of duty.
- The interested parties to the investigation are
given adequate opportunity to represent their case
at several stages of investigation.
- The first opportunity is provided after the initiation
of proceedings. The Authority duly considers the submissions
of all interested parties in response to the initiation
while giving its Preliminary findings.
- After the imposition of provisional duty, the interested
parties file their responses to the Preliminary findings
and opportunity is provided to them to submit the
facts and figures to the Authority at the stage of
verification of their information if the same has
been already filed in response to the initiation.
- A formal Public hearing is held providing opportunities
to all interested parties to make their submissions
before it. All oral submissions made during the hearing
need to be reproduced in writing for the Authority
to take the same on board.
- All these submissions of the different interested
parties are given due consideration and on that basis
the Authority issues a disclosure of essential facts
which are proposed to form the basis of final findings.
- The parties to the investigation are also given
the final opportunity to respond to the disclosure
and represent their case before the final findings
are notified.
26. Can there be
interim relief to the domestic industry pending levy
of final anti dumping duty? In how many days such interim
relief can be expected?
Yes, the Designated Authority recommends
an interim relief which is provided to the affected
domestic industry in the form of provisional anti dumping
duty pending the finalisation of investigation proceedings.
The provisional anti dumping duty is recommended by
the Authority in its preliminary findings and the same
is levied by the Ministry of Finance, Dept. of Revenue.
This serves as immediate relief to the domestic industry
against the injury caused to it by the dumping of goods.
Statutorily, the provisional anti dumping
duty can not be levied earlier than 60 days from the
date of initiation of proceedings. The endeavor of the
Designated Authority has been to recommend provisional
duty immediately after the expiry of the mandatory period
of 60 days. That is to say, in normal circumstances,
the provisional anti dumping duty is recommended
in a period of 60-70 days and levied in a period
of about 3 months from the date of initiation of the
proceedings.
27. Can the
anti dumping duty be levied on a retrospective basis
?
Anti dumping duty can be levied on a
retrospective basis in case it is found that –
- there is a history of dumping which caused injury
or that the importer was, or should have been aware
that the exporter practices dumping and that such
dumping would cause injury; and
- the injury caused by massive dumping of an article
imported in a relatively short time which in the
light of the timing and the volume of imported article
dumped and other circumstances is likely to seriously
undermine the remedial effect of the anti dumping
duty liable to be levied.
However, the anti dumping duty cannot
be levied retrospectively beyond 90 days from the date
of issue of Notification imposing duty.
28. Who imposes
the Anti Dumping duty, provisional or final?
While the Designated Authority (in the
Department of Commerce) recommends the anti dumping
duty, provisional or final, it is the Ministry of Finance,
Dept. of Revenue which acts upon such recommendation
within three months and imposes/levies such duty.
29. What are
the implications for the importers who are liable to
pay anti-dumping duty
if (a) the final duty is less than
the provisional duty;
(b) the final duty is more than the provisional
duty;
Anti dumping duty is recommended and
levied at two stages, provisional and final. If the
final duty levied is less than the provisional duty
which has already been levied and collected, the differential
amount already collected as provisional duty shall be
refunded.
If the final duty imposed is more than
the provisional duty already imposed and collected,
the difference shall not be collected.
If the provisional duty is withdrawn
based on the final findings of the Designated Authority,
than the provisional duty already collected shall be
refunded.
30. What is the arrangement
made to notify the recommendations of the Designated
Authority?
- The Designated Authority notifies its recommendations
with respect to Initiation / Preliminary Findings/Final
Findings etc. through Government of India, Gazette.
- Press Information Bureau, Ministry of Commerce &
Industry also issues a Press Release on the subject
from to time.
- Also NIC, Ministry of Commerce and Industry makes
available the details with respect to recommendations
of the Designated Authority on its web-site
http://commin.nic.in/doc.
- On receipt of recommendations from the Designated
Authority, the Central Government (i.e. Ministry of
Finance, Dept. of Revenue) notifies, the imposition
of Anti-dumping Duties through Government of India,
Gazette.
31. Is the
order of determination of anti-dumping duty appealable?
If so, which is the appellate Authority?
The law provides that an order of determination
of existence degree and effect of dumping is appealable
before the Customs, Excise and Gold (Control) Appellate
Tribunal (CEGAT). However, as per the judicial view,
only the final findings/order of the Designated Authority/Ministry
of Finance can be appealed against before the CEGAT.
No appeal will lie against the Preliminary
findings of the Authority and the provisional duty imposed
on the basis thereof. The Appeal to the CEGAT should
be filed within 90 days.
32. Can the Anti-Dumping
investigation, once initiated, be terminated? If so,
what are the circumstances?
The Designated Authority may suspend
or terminate the investigation in the following cases
:
- If there is a request in writing from the domestic
industry at whose instance the investigation was initiated.
- When there is no sufficient evidence of dumping
or injury.
- If the margin of dumping is less than 2% of the
export price.
- The volume of dumped imports from a country is less
than 3% of the total imports of the like article into
India or the volume of dumped imports collectively
from all such countries is less than 7% of the total
imports.
- If injury is negligible.
33. Aren’t
the Anti Dumping measures injurious to the interests
of the consumers?
The purpose of anti dumping duties, in
general, is to eliminate dumping which is causing injury
to the domestic industry and to re-establish a situation
of open and fair competition in the Indian market, which
is in the general interest of the country.
- The imposition of anti dumping duty might affect
the price levels of the products manufactured using
the subject goods. However, fair competition in the
Indian market will not be reduced by the anti dumping
measures.
- On the contrary, imposition of anti dumping duty
would remove the unfair advantages gained by the overseas
exporters through their dumping practices, would prevent
the decline of the domestic industry and would create
conditions for fair trade.
- The imposition of anti dumping measures would not
restrict imports from the subject country in any way
and therefore, would not hinder the consumers’ access
to the imported goods.
34. What is the period
of validity of the Anti Dumping duty imposed? Can such
duty, once imposed, be reviewed before and after the
expiry of its full term?
The anti dumping duty shall remain in
force for a period of five years from the date of imposition
of duty. However, such duty can be reviewed by the Designated
Authority any time before the expiry of the said period.
- The Authority has the power to review the need for
continuation of anti dumping duty. Such a review can
be done on the basis of a request received from an
interested party in view of the changed circumstances.
- The review may result in the withdrawal of the duty
or in the variation of the duty level depending upon
the new circumstances. Generally speaking, an interested
party can file a request for review only after a year
from the imposition of duty.
- A review shall follow the same procedure as prescribed
for investigation of a fresh case to the extent applicable.
35. Does the
levy of Anti Dumping duty on a particular product extend
to all imports of that product? Which imports are exempt
from such duty?
The levy of anti dumping duty is both
exporter specific and country specific.
- It extends to the imports from only those countries
in respect of which dumping has been alleged and the
complaint has been filed and duty recommended.
- Such duty will not apply to the imports from other
countries in respect of which the domestic industry
has not alleged dumping.
- However, the anti dumping duty is not payable on
imports against the Advance License scheme or on imports
by the 100% EOUs /EPZ units, even if such imports
are from the countries under complaint.
36. Can the Anti-Dumping
and Anti-Subsidy measures be applied simultaneously?
GATT agreement as well as the Indian
laws provide that the injured domestic industry is permitted
to file for relief under the anti-dumping as well as
countervailing duties. However, no articles shall be
subjected to both countervailing and anti-dumping duties
to compensate for the same situation of dumping or export
subsidization.
37. What is the significance
of anti dumping measures in India in the context of
lifting of QR?
India is currently in the process of
phasing out its quantitative restrictions regime in
relation to imports. With removal of licensing restrictions
on imports, there has been a tendency on the part of
several trading partners of India to resort to dumping
of their goods of different kinds into India, thereby
creating a situation of unfair competition in the domestic
market whereby the domestic industry has suffered injury.
- To address such a scenario of unfair trade, and
to provide the requisite remedy to the domestic industry
against injury caused by such dumping, the anti dumping
measures have assumed a great deal of significance.
- The anti dumping measures do not aim at providing
protection to the domestic industry per se. These
are only remedial measures for removal of injury to
the domestic industry caused by the dumping of goods.
The object behind such measures is to re-establish
fair competition and to provide the domestic industry
a level playing field.
- The paramount objective of
the multi-lateral trade regime of WTO is to establish
free and fair international trade. With removal of
QRs, India has moved towards the regime of free trade.
At the same time, anti dumping measures can be applied,
where warranted, in the interest of fair trade.
38. There are number
of cases in which anti dumping duty is imposed on imports
of goods from China. Does India specifically target
China for application of anti dumping measures? Is it
due to China’s non-membership of WTO that India has
so many anti dumping cases against China?
The anti-dumping investigations in India
are conducted under the national law as enshrined in
the Customs Tariff Amendment Act, 1975, as amended in
1995, which is in consonance with the provisions of
WTO. These measures are country neutral and the rules
apply uniformly to China as to any other country.
There is no intention on the part of
DGAD or the Government of India to specifically target
China for application of anti-dumping measures. The
principles and procedures prescribed under the law are
fully complied with in the cases involving China as
in the cases involving other countries.
The number of cases against China has got
nothing to do with its not being a member of WTO. The
anti-dumping action initiated by the Authority is governed
by our national law and rules framed there under. India
has extended Most Favoured Nation (MFN) treatment to
China, which enjoins upon India the obligation of non-discriminatory
treatment of China vis-ŕ-vis other trading partners
including WTO members. Thus the question of discriminating
against China does not arise so far as anti-dumping
measures are concerned.
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