A review has started into the first anti-dumping case initiated by
Chinese companies.
The Ministry of Commerce (MOFCOM) began the assessment Tuesday,
almost five years after the anti-dumping measures were introduced
-- they are set to expire next Thursday.
In
a statement Tuesday, the ministry said deliberations have begun
over whether or not to end the anti-dumping duties on newsprint
imported from Canada, South Korea and the United States.
Nine Chinese newsprint makers made the dumping allegation in 1997
and the overseas groups were found guilty of the charge in the
Chinese Government's final judgment, which was handed down in
1999.
Newsprint from the United States, Canada and South Korea was levied
with tariffs ranging from 9 per cent to 78 per cent. The tariffs
were introduced on July 10, 1998.
According to Chinese regulations, the anti-dumping measures can be
extended if additional dumping or damage to the local industry is
predicted.
Relevant domestic industries can ask for a review 60 days before
the expiration date.
A
dozen local newsprint makers including the Jilin Paper Industry
Corp Ltd and Guangzhou Paper-making Co Ltd submitted an application
for a review on May 9.
They asked MOFCOM to continue the anti-dumping duties on imports
from the three countries.
They argue that the dumping may resume if the duties are
lifted.
They also claim the local industry, which had relief during the
life of the duties, is still fragile and heavily susceptible to
dumping.
They asked MOFCOM to extend the anti-dumping measures so they can
have more time to benefit from the technological upgrades made over
the past five years.
The 12 companies have more than 73 per cent of the local newsprint
industry's annual output.
In
another development, MOFCOM has initiated an anti-dumping
investigation against dispersion unshifted single-mode optical
fiber from the United States, Japan and South Korea.
The charge was filed by two local companies -- the Yangtze Optical
Fiber and Cable Co Ltd and Jiangsu Fasten Photonics Co Ltd -- on
May 7. The companies make about 69 per cent of the product in
China.
(China Daily July 2, 2003)
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