Chapter 6
Rebuttable presumption of dumping
6.1
This chapter discusses items 3, 4 and 7 of the bill which presume that
where dumping and material injury has been proven, the material injury is the
result of the dumping.
6.2
It is important to note that the increasingly globalised nature of trade
invariably leads to significant pressures on industries that are heavily
exposed to the global macroeconomic environment. As such, a domestic industry
may suffer 'injury' from many factors linked to the global economic activity,
including changing trade patterns, domestic macroeconomic and fiscal policies,
and the economic outlook for Australia and its trading partners. Indeed, many
stakeholders, including Australian Paper, acknowledged that other factors can
contribute to causing injury do domestic producers:
Again, it is very much like the injury issue. It is very hard
to separate the different causes. Right now we have a dollar that is up around
US$1.09. We have the looming prospect of a carbon tax. We have dumping and
subsidies to the tune of, probably, 20 or 30 per cent out of the emerging Asian
economies. Which one is the straw that breaks the camel's back?[1]
6.3
To remain internationally competitive and domestically viable,
Australian producers (and exporters) need to adapt to these shocks, and often
these global forces have resulted in significant structural changes in
Australian industries. This point was highlighted by the Australian Workers'
Union (AWU) during the public hearing:
Australian exporters are world competitive by definition and
need to adapt to the pressures associated with the two-speed economy, including
higher exchange rates and interest rates.[2]
6.4
By failing to distinguish between injury caused by this wider range of
factors and injury attributable by dumping, a risk arises that anti-dumping and
countervailing measures may come to be seen as a protectionist tool both
locally and internationally. It would also potentially lead to a lower
incentive for domestic industries that are exposed to global economic shocks to
adapt to these pressures, resulting in increasing inefficiencies in the
domestic industry and leaving them further vulnerable to these shocks.
6.5
Furthermore, the imposition of measures that have wide-ranging
repercussions, not necessarily restricted to the immediate petitioning
industry, reaffirms the need for the decision to impose such measures to be
based on substantial evidence and consideration of all factors.
Rebuttable presumption of dumping
6.6
Under the current legislation, when determining whether material injury
has occurred as a result of dumping/subsidisation, the Minister must take into
account other factors that may be causing injury to the industry. He or she
must not attribute injury from these other factors to dumping or exportation of
those goods. The legislation allows that in reaching a determination of whether
to impose anti-dumping or countervailing duties, only material injury that is
solely due to dumping/subsidisation is considered.
6.7
The bill removes the requirement for the Minister to consider other
factors, and substitutes into subsection 269TAE(2A) that, in instances where
dumping has been proven and material injury has been proven, a rebuttable
presumption exists whereby the material injury is determined to be as a result
of the dumping rather than any other factor.
6.8
Lending support to the amendment, CSR Limited explained in its
submission that it had applied for anti-dumping measures to protect its
Viridian brand in 2010:
When Customs completed the Statement of Essential Facts they
were of the view that dumping had occurred. However the day before they were
due to present their advice to the Minister, they terminated the investigation
claiming they could find no material injury. An appeal to the TMRO was
successful, finding that Customs needed to review their findings.[3]
6.9
CSR Limited noted that if this amendment were in place, the Viridian
case 'would have succeeded and not been terminated'.[4]
Does the amendment achieve its
objective?
6.10
Customs noted that in an anti-dumping investigation, it is required to
determine whether or not there is injury and whether that injury was caused by
dumping and/or subsidisation. This requires Customs to carefully consider all
'available evidence'. Customs further pointed out that under Australian
legislation, an application for anti-dumping measures must contain sufficient
evidence that dumping has caused material injury.[5]
For it to determine that a good is dumped, therefore, it needs to consider the
other factors which the bill seeks to remove.
Conformity with WTO obligations
6.11
The concept of substantial evidence is deeply entrenched in the WTO
agreements. For example, Article 3.5 of the AD Agreement states that:
...The demonstration of a causal relationship between the
dumped imports and the injury to the domestic industry shall be based on an
examination of all relevant evidence before the authorities. The authorities
shall also examine any known factors other than the dumped imports which at the
same time are injuring the domestic industry, and the injuries caused by these
other factors must not be attributed to the dumped imports.[6]
6.12
The amendments would therefore be in breach of Australia's international
obligations under the AD and SCM Agreements. Despite its support for the
amendment, CSR Limited also was unsure whether these amendments would 'stand up
under WTO rules'.[7]
6.13
This was a point noted by other submitters, including the LCA and LIV,
Moulis Legal and DFAT, which believed that the amendments were also
inconsistent with Article 5.2 of the AD Agreement:
To allow such a presumption would undermine the clear
distinction between dumping (which in its own cannot be remedied) and dumping
causing material injury (which can be remedied). Pursuant to GATT Article VI,
the WTO Anti-Dumping Agreement and the SCM Agreement, measures can only be imposed
if a determination has been made on each of three issues:
dumping/subsidisation, injury and causation...Simple assertion, unsubstantiated
by relevant evidence, cannot be considered sufficient to meet the requirements
of ...[Article 5.2][8]
6.14
The critical issue is what Customs considers to be 'positive evidence'.
This was highlighted during an exchange at the public hearing between Senator
Xenophon and Mr Percival, representing JELD-WEN:
Senator XENOPHON:...It [Article 3.1] says it
[anti-dumping/countervailing findings] must be based on positive evidence, but
isn't there a threshold issue if you cannot obtain the positive evidence
because a party is withholding that evidence...? How do you deal with that?...
Mr Percival: ...The issue there becomes part of the investigation
procedure, and there are provisions in the WTO agreement which do address this.
It says that the first thing is to try to get positive evidence from the
importers and exporters to provide whether dumping is occurring or not. If they
do not cooperate, there are provisions in the WTO agreement which say Customs
can rely on the best information available.
Senator XENOPHON: I value your evidence, but how do you
define a lack of cooperation? That in itself is the subject of disputes, isn't
it?
Mr Percival: The way I understand Customs to assess lack of
cooperation is that after they have initiated an investigation they send to all
known importers and exporters questionnaires...Those that respond are
considered to be cooperating at that point in time. Customs, depending on the
numbers that were involved...would go out and investigate each one of those.
That is when they put in their forensic people and their auditors, and that is
when they spend a week or two overseas checking that information and verifying
it. That is when...the issue that you are concerned with is dealt with: are
these accounts sustainable, doctored or what have you?...If during that process
information is withheld or they decline to participate, they are also
considered to be non-cooperating.
Senator XENOPHON: It goes to the question of the quality of
the investigation and the resources as well, doesn't it?
Mr Percival: Yes.
Senator XENOPHON: And that is one of the criticisms of
industry.[9]
Committee view
6.15
The committee understands that there have been anti-dumping cases, such
as the Viridian case, where decisions made by Customs were unclear and where
the lack of cooperation from importers and exporters could have played a
decisive factor. However, this is an issue that is more closely related to the
transparency of Customs' decisions, as well as the level of resourcing and
expertise dedicated to investigating anti-dumping and countervailing
applications.
6.16
In addition, the rebuttable presumption amendment reduces the
information verification role of Customs, as there would be a lower incentive
for Customs to pursue the veracity of information provided from both the
complainant and opposing parties to an anti-dumping/countervailing application.
This would weaken the evidence-based nature of an investigative process, and
limit Customs' ability to conform with the Act's requirements under section
269TC, which require reasonable grounds to be established for the publication
of a dumping or countervailing duty notice.
6.17
Further, the amendment is likely to not conform with Australia's
international obligations under Articles 3 and 5 of the AD Agreement, and
Articles 11 and 15 of the SCM Agreement.
Recommendation 4
6.18 The committee recommends the Senate reject items 3, 4 and 7 of the bill.
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