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ANTIDUMPING: A NEW SOLUTION

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Title: ANTIDUMPING: A NEW SOLUTION


1
ANTI-DUMPING A NEW SOLUTION
  • Presented by
  • Catalina GuáquetaFarida KerouaniAdrian Senyszyn

2
Anti-Dumping
  • Explanation
  • Proposal
  • Broader Implications
  • Futures Challenges
  • Bibliography

3
What is Anti-Dumping?
  • Article VI of GATT 1994
  • A product is said to be dumped when its export
    price is less than its normal value, that is less
    than the sale of a like product in the domestic
    market in the exporting country.

4
Anti-Dumping Litigation
  • World Trade Organization
  • Countries are responsible for bringing a case to
    the WTO Dispute Resolution System.
  • U.S. Court of International Trade
  • Commerce Department determines if anti-dumping
    occurred.
  • International Trade Commission (ITC) determines
    if material injury occurs.

5
Anti-Dumping Globally
  • Anti-dumping measures taken by WTO members have
    increased from 129 in 1994 to 236 in 2000 83.
  • Dec. 2000 - 1119 anti-dumping measures in place
    globally.
  • New users Argentina, India, Brazil, South
    Africa.
  • Traditional users Canada, U.S., European Union,
    Australia, Mexico.
  • Most affected industries Metal, Chemical,
    plastic, textiles, machinery and equipment,
    agriculture and food.

6
Most Affected Sectors
Source WTO Secretariat, Rules Division
Anti-dumping Database
7
Anti-Dumping Measures
8
Statistics (January - June 2002)
  • 30 less investigations for this period in
    comparison with last year at the same period of
    time.
  • 37 cases initiated by developed countries and 63
    by developing countries.
  • So far we have the similar trend for steel and
    chemical sectors.
  • Out of 22 AD initiations in the US 16 involved
    metal products.

9
U.S. As Complainant
  • 1 of 59 complaints made by the U.S. were related
    to anti-dumping.
  • Case Mexico Anti-Dumping Duties on High
    Fructose Corn Syrup
  • U.S. prevailed in litigation.

10
U.S. As Respondent
  • 7 of 69 cases that have been brought against the
    U.S. are related to anti-dumping.
  • Case lost Anti-dumping Steel plate from India.
  • 6 of 8 cases in consultations are Anti-dumping
    related.

11
Impact of Anti-Dumping Laws
  • Pros
  • Prevents Monopolies
  • Protects Vulnerable Industries
  • Allows Firms Time to Compete
  • Preserves Jobs
  • Cons
  • Against Free Trade Concept
  • Trade Barrier Lowers Economic Growth
  • Distorts the Market
  • Protects Firms from Competition
  • Hurts Consumers

12
Proposal
  • Reform Anti-dumping procedure in the U.S.
  • Negotiate minor changes to the WTO Anti-dumping
    Agreement.

13
Reform the U.S. Anti-Dumping Law
  • Department of Commerce must review the concept of
    anti-dumping.
  • Review the methodology of anti-dumping.
  • ITC must define material injury and be a more
    partial judge.
  • Material injury is broad and subject to
    interpretation.
  • Congress must ensure that the ITC is cognizant of
    WTO negotiated agreements.

14
Changes to WTO Agreement
  • Penalize WTO members for abuse of anti-dumping
    law.
  • Amend article 9, Imposition and Collection of
    Anti-Dumping Duties
  • Negotiate the industry specific, incremental
    decrease of anti-dumping laws globally.
  • Revise article 11, Duration and Review of
    Anti-Dumping and Price Undertakings.
  • Tie in to a compromise on IPR agreements, or
    other U.S. interests.

15
Stakeholders
  • In Favor
  • Consumers
  • Exporters
  • WB/IMF
  • Economists
  • Regional Agreements (NAFTA)
  • Against
  • US currently protected industries
  • US Labor Unions (AFL/CIO)
  • Countries who want to protect their domestic
    market

16
Benefits for the U.S.
  • Reduce the number of cases brought against the
    U.S.
  • U.S. wins as a Complainant, and loses as a
    Respondent.
  • Better defense in anti-dumping cases.
  • U.S. law closer to WTO agreements.
  • Hold other nations accountable.

17
Broader Implications
  • Increase competition, which will increase
    productivity and efficiency.
  • Greater economic prosperity for all WTO members.
  • Lower prices for consumers.
  • Higher national income.

18
Future Challenges
  • Negotiating a change to WTO anti-dumping
    agreements.
  • Altering the Dispute Settlement System to award
    damages.
  • Convincing the American public that reform is
    critical for continuing U.S. success.

19
Bibliography
  •  1 Harvard International Review. National
    Sovereignty in the World Trading System. Winter
    2001.
  • The Economist. Our Law, Your Law. June 27, 2002
  • Association for Consumer Research. Global Trade
    Policy Agenda for Change. September/October
  • 2001.
  • 4 President George W. Bush. Remarks by The
    President at Signing of the Trade Act of 2002.
    August 6,
  • 2002.
  • Chemical Week. Trade Barriers Start to Fall
    Following WTO Entry. September 4, 2002.
  • 6 Director General Supachai Panitchpakdi.
    Trade and Sustainable Development The Doha
    Development
  • Agenda. Johannesburg, South Africa.
    September 3, 2002.
  • The Financial Times. Playground Rules that
    Promote Protectionism. September 3, 2002.
  • The Economist. The Dumping Dilemma. May 30,
    2002.
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