Chapter 5
Importer to bear the onus of proof
5.1
This chapter discusses item 12 of the bill. This item provides that the
importer of goods which is subject to anti-dumping application bears the onus
of proof to demonstrate that the goods have not been dumped or subsidised for
export into Australia.
5.2
A frequent suggestion that has been made in many reviews into
Australia's anti-dumping and countervailing framework is that the onus of proof
of dumping should be shifted from the complainant industry to the importer.[1]
5.3
Item 12 of the bill seeks to reduce the financial burden on companies by
inserting a new section (269TCA) which shifts the burden of proof onto the
importer of the alleged dumped or subsidised good. The amendment envisages a
situation where, once Customs receives an application form, it will be able to
approach the overseas manufacturer and importer and the onus will be on them to
prove they are not dumping.
5.4
Any material lack of cooperation on the part of the importer of the
imported goods would lead to a presumption that the imported goods are, in
fact, dumped goods.
Amendment 'levels the playing
field'
5.5
Unions and some industry members 'warmly' welcomed the amendment.[2]
For example, the Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union (CFMEU)
supported the amendment, as:
This amendment is necessary in order dissuade domiciled
importing firms from not cooperating with the Australian Customs and Border
Protections service out of commercial interest which has been a characteristic
of a number investigations recently conducted by Customs. Non-cooperation or
refusing to answer to the case levelled against the exporters in exporting
countries or the importers in Australia implies guilt and should be treated
this way.[3]
5.6
The Australian Industry Group (AIG) contended that reversing the onus of
proof from Australian industry to the importers 'may go some way to "level
the playing field"',[4]
while CSR Limited noted that:
Customs devotes a substantial
effort to the applicant's business, with intense scrutiny of accounts.
Importers or overseas manufacturers are less likely to provide such data and it
is unlikely Customs provide the same degree of scrutiny when investigating
overseas. The benefit of the doubt for uncooperative participants should lie
with the applicant and importer data which is less available and transparent
should be treated with caution. Most of the exporters in China in the Viridian
case did not co-operate.[5]
5.7
However, other submitters were highly critical of the proposed
amendments on procedural, equity and legal grounds, as discussed below.
Conformity with WTO obligations
5.8
The Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU) contended that 'nothing in
clause 12 of the bill is inconsistent with the WTO rules set above'.[6]
It argued that even if passed:
- Customs will still have to notify
affected foreign governments of receipt of a complaint (s 269TB(2B));
- Customs may still reject the
complaint if there do not ‘appear to be reasonable grounds’ for making the
complaint (s 269TC(2));
- After accepting a complaint, Customs
must still provide foreign firms (and domestic importers) with an opportunity
to put their case (s 269TC(7), (8));
-
If foreign firms (and/or
governments) provide a response, this may suffice to rebut the presumption that
clause 12 of the Bill would impose, and satisfy Customs that no dumping or
subsidisation has occurred.[7]
5.9
The ACTU further noted that Customs will have 'express authority to rely
on the facts available' to come to the conclusion that dumping has occurred,
and that 'this is already the position under Australian law'.[8]
5.10
However, this view was not shared by legal experts and the Department of
Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT), who stated that the amendments would result
in a breach of Australia’s international obligations. Moulis Legal argued that
the amendment breached Article 6 of the AD Agreement and Article 12 of the SCM
Agreement. In particular, it noted that:
...Article 6.10 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement requires an
investigating authority to determine an individual margin of dumping for each
known exporter (from the exporting country) or producer of the product under
investigation. The CEO would fail in his or her investigative obligation, and
would deny exporters and producers their WTO rights, if the CEO were to place
an onus on importers to prove that dumping or subsidisation had not occurred.[9]
5.11
DFAT also stated that this amendment would be inconsistent with the AD
and SCM Agreements, as it is the CEO’s duty, and not the importer's, to make
the determination of dumping and/or subsidisation following an investigation
that Customs undertakes.[10]
It noted that under the AD Agreement, the determination of material injury must
be:
...based on positive evidence and involve an objective
examination of both (a) the volume of the dumped imports and the effect of the
dumped imports on prices in the domestic market for like products, and (b) the
consequent impact of these imports on domestic producers of such products.[11]
5.12
In addition, DFAT noted that the WTO agreements do in fact cover
situations where there is a ‘material lack of cooperation’, as Article 6.8 of
the AD Agreement provides that:
In cases in which any interested party refuses access to, or
otherwise does not provide, necessary information within a reasonable period or
significantly impedes the investigation, preliminary and final determinations,
affirmative or negative, may be made on the basis of the facts available.[12]
An undue and unfair burden on
importers?
5.13
If the main arguments surrounding the inconsistency of the amendment
with Australia's WTO obligations centre on 'facts available' to Customs in
making a determination on dumping/subsidisation, a key issue is whether the
importers, who now bear the onus of proof, would be able to establish such
facts.
5.14
Customs was concerned that the amendment would be problematic in
practice due to the very limited knowledge or evidence that importers have
about the industry potentially affected by dumping. For example, importers
would not have the information required to determine normal values and export
prices. For Customs to determine whether dumping is occurring, it makes
specific numerical findings as follows:
The start point for [calculations of the factors that
determine whether dumping is occurring] is data provided by the Australian
industry as prima facie evidence of dumping in its application... In practice
importers may have little, if any, relevant evidence to determine these issues.
Generally, exporters... are the best source of this evidence.[13]
5.15
This view is corroborated by the Australian Steel Association (ASA),
which argued that the imposition of the onus of proof on importers would be a
'denial of natural justice'[14]:
Importantly it needs to be recognised that in respect to ASA
member steel imports the sales are an ARMS LENGTH transaction and neither the
importer or beneficial owner of the imported goods have access to the necessary
cost, financial or sales data of their overseas supplier....importers are
totally reliant on their overseas supplier co-operating fully with "Customs",
and for reasons of commercial confidentiality, importers do not get access to
this required financial and sales data.[15]
Does the amendment achieve its
objective?
5.16
Despite its aim, the reversal of onus of proof would not necessarily
lead to lower burden on domestic producers. This is because the application is
initiated by the domestic producers, who would still be required to include in
the application form supporting data and evidence that Customs uses in its prima
facie screening of the applications. The Act would still require the
applicant to establish reasonable grounds for the publication of a dumping duty
notice or a countervailing duty notice.
5.17
Should the application be progressed to the investigation stage on the
grounds of "threatening to cause material injury" to the industry,
the potential inadequacy of the data given by importers could still limit
Customs' ability to establish the variable factors and to calculate dumping
margins necessary to impose anti-dumping measures.
5.18
In seeking to reverse the onus of proof, the amendments therefore may
inadvertently penalise importers who may be acting in the best interest of
their business (by seeking the lowest cost alternative) and who do not
necessarily have an understanding of the general market dynamics for the industry
affected by dumping or subsidisation. It also creates a negative spill-over
effect, and shifts the cost of applying for a dumping or countervailing duty
from the immediate industry affected to other sections of the Australian
economy. The Institute for International Trade (IIT) argued that:
Even if there is injury or damage, the costs of anti-dumping
measures benefiting a few may in some circumstances be disproportionate to the
wider community impacts and costs. If injury is simply presumed without need
for further proof by the complaining party, in some circumstances it may serve
to artificially inflate the perceived costs to those few beneficiaries,
relative to the wider impacts. This may in turn convert a free kick into a free
ride, ultimately leading to the risks and anti-competitive consequences of
long-term protection.[16]
5.19
The Law Council of Australia (LCA) and Law Institute of Victoria (LIV)
recommended that the amendment not be proceeded with as:
Not only is it unreasonable to impose a statutory obligation
upon a party that that party cannot discharge but then to provide the resulting
lack of cooperation gives rise to a rebuttable presumption that that importer’s
imports are dumped when, again, the importer is not in a position to rebut that
presumption is unreasonable.[17]
Other approaches
5.20
Customs noted that importers and end-users 'generally cooperate and
provide relevant information, as to not do so would likely result in a finding
adverse to their commercial interests'.[18]
It added that it deems that an interested party is non‑cooperative where
they: (a) do not provide the information requested in the exporter
questionnaire, (b) do not respond to the questionnaire in time, or (c) do not
permit verification of information supplied in response to a questionnaire.[19]
5.21
The major consequence for exporters of non-cooperation is that they may
be subject to an 'all other rate' of dumping or countervailing duties, which is
higher than the rates for cooperating exporters.[20]
5.22
If the critical issue for domestic producers and unions is a lack of
cooperation from importers and exporters, then there are other, potentially
less burdensome avenues that could be used as an incentive for cooperation.
There already exist, for example, under subsection 269ZV(1) of the Act, penalties
for providing misleading information to the Trade Measures Review Officer
(TMRO):
A person must not give the Review Officer any written
information that the person knows to be false or misleading in a material
particular. Penalty: 20 penalty units.[21]
5.23
JELD-WEN argued in its submission that similar provisions, consistent
with domestic legislation and international obligations, could be made when
interested parties refuse to provide access to information, or provide
misleading information, during the course of an investigative period. It noted
that:
Imposing penalties, similar to those applying under the
companies' code where parties are found to have submitted deliberately
misleading financial and management information. Where a party, either the
applicant or an objector, is found to have deliberately breached the
guidelines applying to the provision of information, it should be required to
meet the costs of the other party.[22]
Committee view
5.24
The committee believes that the proposal to reverse the onus of proof,
requiring importers to substantiate that dumping is not taking place, would
result in an unfair burden being imposed on importers which may not have access
to the information required to substantiate that dumping is not occurring.
5.25
Further, the amendment is not likely to reduce the cost of accessing the
system. This is because of requirements in other sections of the Act that the
domestic industry would still be required to fulfil as part of the initial
application, such as providing sufficient evidence that dumping has occurred
and that it is causing material injury to the industry.
5.26
Considering the difficulties that both Customs and the petitioning
industries currently face in ascertaining what constitutes 'material injury',
the lack of a clear definition of 'material lack of cooperation' could create
further uncertainty in Customs' determinations and potentially result in
increased litigation.
5.27
The reversal of onus of proof would also likely be in breach of
Australia’s international obligations under Articles 3, 5 and 6 of the AD
Agreement, and Articles 11, 12 and 15 of the SCM Agreement. This could result
in increased and costly litigation both through the appeals process as well as
part of the WTO's dispute settlement process.
5.28
The committee believes, however, that ABS restrictions on import
statistics can create difficulties for users of Australia's anti-dumping and
countervailing system. Improving the accessibility of this import data should,
therefore, benefit users of the system, particularly smaller manufacturers who
may have difficulties in obtaining these statistics from other sources.
Recommendation 3
5.29 The committee recommends that to address the recurring issue of import
data restrictions that place a significant evidentiary burden on complainants
in anti-dumping/countervailing applications, the Government should require the
Australian Bureau of Statistics to improve access to non-confidential import
data and to reduce the suppression of import data on grounds of confidentiality
where public records of the data exist.
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