Chinese companies will continue to appeal against the Indian
Government's ruling that silk exports have been dumped in
India.
So said the China Chamber of Commerce for the Import and Export
of Textiles yesterday on its website.
The Indian Government claimed late last month that Chinese silk
fabrics were sold to India at prices below the normal value,
damaging the Indian industry.
The association will arrange for experts and firms to evaluate
the ruling to decide how to respond, said an official with the
chamber of commerce who declined to give his name.
The Indian authorities have set provisional tariffs ranging from
57 percent to 108 percent for Chinese firms. "The duty rates are
higher than expected," the source said. He said the chamber of
commerce would continue its appeal but declined to disclose
details.
Selling at prices less than the normal value and damage to the
industry are two elements in deciding whether dumping has occurred
and if so, what measures to take against it.
As India has refused to give market economy treatment to any of
the Chinese firms involved, production costs offered by Chinese
companies are not taken into account; instead the costs of a third
country are used to calculate the "normal value."
Therefore, Chinese firms hope they can prove their exports do
not hurt Indian firms.
The case, which began around a year ago, involves 100 Chinese
exporters and products worth US$180 million. The firms include
about 30 leading silk exporters which account for at least 80
percent of China's silk fabric exports to India.
According to the most recent World Trade Organization (WTO)
secretariat report on anti-dumping investigations and anti-dumping
measures which came out last year, China is the most frequent
subject of new investigations. There were 33 cases directed at its
exports from July to December 2005, up from 24 during in the same
period of 2004.
Investigations into alleged dumping by China are spreading from
developed countries to developing countries, said Mei Xinyu, a
trade researcher with the Chinese Academy of International Trade
and Economic Co-operation, a think-tank under the commerce
ministry.
(China Daily May 11, 2006)