| Nan Ya Plastics Corporation
February 5, 2007
Committee on Ways and Means
The United States House of Representatives
1102 Longworth H.O.B.
Washington, D.C. 20515
Dear
Sir/Madam:
On behalf of Nan Ya Plastics
Corporation, America, we hereby respond to the January 31, 2007 Advisory from
the Committee on Ways and Means soliciting comments, by February 7, 2007, on
the Commerce Department’s proposed modification to its calculation of
weighted-average dumping margins in antidumping investigations. Congress
should vigorously oppose the Commerce Department’s decision to end its
long-standing practice of “zeroing,” which will eviscerate the principal tool
available to U.S. manufacturers and producers to combat unfair trade practices.
The Commerce Department, on December
27, 2006, notified Congress that it would implement the World Trade
Organization’s Appellate Body ruling banning Commerce’s practice of “zeroing.”
The Commerce Department stated that it would, effective February 22, 2007,
begin to offset positive dumping margins (sales that were not dumped) against
sales with negative dumping margins (sales that were dumped), when calculating
the weighted-average dumping margin in antidumping investigations. In other
words, Commerce will no longer set positive dumping margins to “zero” when
calculating overall margins of dumping. The effect of this change to U.S. law will be to reduce generally and/or eliminate margins of dumping in investigations,
and to mask or eliminate dumped sales by foreign exporters.
Congress must oppose the Commerce’s
Department’s inappropriate concession on this issue. First, Congress has given
the Administration explicit instructions in the context of the Doha Round of
trade negotiations to defend the practice of zeroing; those negotiations are
ongoing. Second, Congress, not Commerce, is the proper body for making laws.
For many years, the Commerce Department argued before the Courts that it was
statutorily required to zero in investigations. While the Courts have
stated that Commerce has some discretion in this matter, Commerce changed its
view only when it became apparent that the WTO intended to ban improperly the
practice of zeroing. The Department should not alter course because of an
adverse WTO ruling that fails to address significant evidentiary findings by
the lower panel, relies on novel findings by reference to evidence not before
the Appellate Body, and that exceeds the Appellate Body’s authority.
Additionally, in May 9, 2006 comments
filed at the WTO, the Administration noted “disturbing” aspects of the WTO
ruling, including that (1) it would be “extraordinary” for Members to
have negotiated specific language in the Antidumping Agreement now rendered
superfluous by the Appellate Body ruling; (2) the Appellate Body’s finding that
dumping should be measured for “the product as a whole” reverses 47 years of
WTO jurisprudence finding that dumping should be measured “in respect of each
single importation of the product;” and (3) that the ruling banning the
practice of zeroing was never agreed to by Member States in the Uruguay Round
or previous trade agreement negotiations.
Congress is empowered to make U.S. laws, not the WTO. Commerce’s reversal of its long-standing practice of zeroing is
tantamount to yielding that authority to others. As such, Congress should
require the Commerce Department to continue its zeroing practice when
calculating antidumping duty margins in investigations.
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