Font size:
Print
Anti-Dumping Duty
Context:
The Directorate General of Trade Remedies (DGTR) has launched an anti-dumping probe into the import of hot rolled flat products of alloy or non-alloy steel from Vietnam.
About Anti-Dumping Duty
- Anti-dumping duty is a tariff applied to imports from foreign countries when these goods are priced below the fair market value of similar products in the domestic market.
- The government imposes this duty when it suspects that foreign goods are being “dumped” into the domestic market at artificially low prices.
- The primary goal of anti-dumping duty is to shield local businesses and markets from unfair competition by foreign imports and to restore fair trade by correcting the market distortion caused by dumping.
- The World Trade Organization (WTO) permits the use of anti-dumping measures as a tool for ensuring fair competition.
- It allows the government of the affected country to take legal action against the dumping nation, provided there is concrete evidence of significant harm to domestic industries.
- The government must demonstrate that dumping occurred, quantify the extent of the dumping, and prove the injury or threat of injury to the domestic market.
The choice of equipment can make or destroy your business in today’s cutthroat industry.