When Vietnam signed a bilateral trade agreement with
the US in 2000 with huge optimism on the Vietnamese
side, probably non one had seriously considered the
possibility that trade between these countries had
the chance of becoming less free in the years to come.
This possibility was realized in July this year, when
the US Department of Commerce and the International
Trade Commission agreed to slap anti-dumping duties
of up to 64% on Vietnam exports of catfish to America
on the grounds of dumping. This puts in jeopardy the
livelihood of a large number of catfish farmers in
the Mekong Delta in Vietnam. More important, this
casts a cloud over Vietnam's huge shrimp exports to
America, exports that a much larger chunk of the Vietnamese
population is dependent on.
Vietnam had been exporting catfish even before 1995,
when the official embargo on Vietnamese exports was
lifted by the US. However, the tremendous spurt in
exports came in 1999 when raw seafood tariffs dropped
to zero. At present, Vietnam exports some 18.3 million
kilos of Catfish to the US, which is valued at 55.1
million $US (2002). The value of exports has been
increasing at the amazing annual rate of 60.21% between
1999 and 2002. The volume of exports shows an even
higher growth rate of 77% between 1999 and 2002. The
change, which had started to take place from 1999,
shows an incredible increase of over 160% per cent
in 2000 when compared to the 1999 level of trade volume.
The value of exports too showed a remarkable, though
lesser, increase of 123.9 % between 1999 and 2000.
This trend has evidently continued since Vietnam's
exports have been boosted by a demand for its tasty,
and cheap catfish.
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Since tariffs dropped to zero, Vietnam had been able
to export at its normal price, which comes out to be
much cheaper than its American counterpart. This is
because Vietnam has the advantage of cheap labour
and other inputs. Raising fish in free flowing water
has the dual advantages of first, producing more
tasty fish, and second, producing fish at much
cheaper rates compared to American Catfish which
uses more expensive groundwater. The American
Catfish Farmers had been protesting that Vietnamese
Catfish was not produced under hygienic conditions
according to international standards. However,
inspection by the department of Commerce had clearly
revealed that this was not indeed the case.
Vietnamese catfish is produced to international
standards, and most of the fish-feed are supplied by
an American company called Cargill.
Catfish: To be or not to be
Vietnam's gradually larger presence in the Catfish
market soon started to spell trouble for the 590
million dollars US domestic catfish industry that is
mainly located in Arkansas, Mississippi and a few
other southern states. The trouble had been brewing
for some time and a foreboding about the final
pro-protection judgement emerged in 2002 itself,
when the Department of Commerce in the US, in
response to a litigation suit filed by the catfish
industry located in the south of US, prevented the
Vietnamese catfish from being called catfish at all.
More specifically, the catfish Farmers of America
(CFA) lobbied the Congress to include language in
the 2002 Agriculture Appropriations Act that
specifically barred Vietnamese exporters from
labeling their fish as catfish. Their argument was
that only catfish of the species 'Ictalurus
Punctatus', obviously cultivated by CFA, could be
called catfish. The species cultivated by Vietnam, 'Pangasius',
has now been banned by the American Farm Security
Act of 2002.
Vietnamese catfish are now labeled Basa and Tra,
which are the local names for the subspecies. Given
the fact that there are actually 2,500 subspecies in
the catfish family, which includes both the American
and the Vietnamese varieties, it was not clear why
American Congress believed their farmers have some
intrinsic right to the name catfish that is ranked
above the rights of Vietnamese catfish farmers. But
in a world where bigger fish eats smaller fish, it
was not surprising that Vietnamese farmers were
forced to swallow this piece of protectionism and
hope for the best. As it turned out, the demand for
Vietnamese catfish, after initially suffering a
decline, picked up again. This was despite active
campaigning by the CFA against it.
Though Vietnam increased its sales drastically since
1999, it had occupied less than 4% of the total
catfish market in America over this period. However,
the bone of contention was the export of frozen Basa
and Tra fillet, which had occupied about 20% of the
domestic market in the US. The American producers
are facing competition from Vietnam, the only other
big producer of catfish in the world, in other
markets like the EU, Australia and Japan as well. So
it was getting more and more urgent for them to
protect their domestic market.
Anti Dumping: no hope for a non-market economy
The American products continued to suffer from stiff
Vietnamese competition. This made the CFA, think of
other measures to escape from it. The next best
method was to suggest a re-course to the provision
of anti-dumping in the WTO rules and push for anti
dumping/countervailing tariffs against Vietnamese
catfish. However, it was difficult to prove that the
Vietnamese catfish industry was receiving government
subsidies or that the producing/exporting units were
undercutting their export price, which was necessary
for proving that dumping was taking place.
This made it imperative for the CFA to chose another
line of offense. Vietnam, given its historical
background, lay vulnerable in one particular area –
its market economy status. It was, as it turned out,
easy for the CFA to argue that Vietnam is a
'non-market' economy. This clause in the WTO rules,
basically suggests that any economy that falls under
this category cannot claim to have competitive
market prices. More specifically, their prices may
include an involuntary subsidization given the fact
that input prices (for example of labour) may not be
competitively determined.
In this case, the price level of some other market
economy, which has a close resemblance to the
non-market economy in question, is used as a
surrogate or proxy for determining whether prices at
which products were offered for sale by the
non-market economy, are competitive or not. This
means for example, that for calculating Vietnam's
competitive price level (prices that would have
prevailed under a market economy) prices in some
other country that produces similar products under
similar conditions would be used as indicators.
Anti-dumping measures could be resorted to if it was
found that these proxy prices (adjusted according to
other supply conditions in Vietnam) reigned above
the actual non-market economy prices offered by
Vietnam.
After determined petitioning by CFA and individual
American catfish farmers, the Department of
Commerce's import administration determined on
November 2002 that Vietnam was to be treated as a
non-market economy (effective from July 1, 2001)
under the U.S. antidumping and countervailing duty
laws. To quote from the report, "while Vietnam has
made significant progress on a number of reforms,
the Department's analysis indicates that Vietnam has
not yet made the transition to a market economy.
Until revoked, Vietnam's non-market economy status
will apply to all future administrative proceedings
covering periods of investigation or review that
fall after the effective date of this decision".
This left the way open for finding a 'suitable'
proxy. The Department of Commerce (DoC) chose to
pick India and Bangladesh as surrogate economies for
comparing catfish price levels. The DoC, found the
price levels in these countries much higher than
Vietnam levels. Despite protests by the Vietnamese
Association of Seafood Exporters and Producers (VASEP),
the Department of Commerce (DoC) concluded in its
preliminary order on January 27th, 2003 that "
Vietnamese producers/exporters have made sales to
U.S. customers at less than fair value" and
recommended the slapping of anti-dumping duties on
all major producers' products of fish fillets . They
calculated anti dumping margins ranging from 37.94 %
(Vinh Hoan Company) and 63.88% (Vietnam-wide).
Subject to a final recommendation by the DoC, and
its approval by the US International Trade
Commission (ITC), America was all set to slap huge
anti dumping duties on Vietmnam's catfish fillet.
Preliminary Antidumping Margins Found
by DOC
|
Company |
Margins |
Agifish |
61.88% |
Cataco
|
41.06% |
Nam Viet |
37.94% |
Respondents
who voluntarily
submitted Section A responses
|
49.16% |
Vietnam-Wide |
63.88% |
Source:
Fact sheet on Preliminary determination
in the Anti-dumping Duty Investigation
of Certain Frozen Fish Fillets from
Vietnam, Department of Commerce, USA,
27th January 2003. |
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The subsequent final recommendation by Doc on 17th
June, upheld more or less its previous
recommendation that Vietnam had been selling its
Catfish 'at less than fair value'. Taking Bangladesh
as the surrogate country, the report suggested anti
dumping duties to the tune of 64% be imposed on
Vietnam-wide catfish products with immediate effect.
In case of some particular companies that had argued
various critical circumstances, DoC made certain
exceptions and applied different margins, some lower
compared to the previous margins calculated by the
preliminary findings. According to this final
determination the Vietnam-wide rate of an incredibly
high 63.88% applied to all entries of the
merchandise under investigation except for entries
from Agifish, Vinh Hoan, Nam Viet, CATACO, Afiex,
Cafatex, Da Nang, Mekonimex, QVD, Viet Hai and Vinh
Long.
Final
Weighted Average Dumping Margins on
Certain
Frozen Fish Fillets from Vietnam |
Producer
/ Manufacturer / Exporter |
Weighted-Average
Margin (%) |
Agifish |
44.76 |
Vinh
Hoan |
36.84 |
Nam
Viet |
52.90 |
Cataco
|
44.66 |
Afiex
|
44.66 |
Cafatex |
44.66 |
Da
Nang |
44.66 |
Mekonimex |
44.66 |
QVD |
44.66 |
Viet
Hai |
44.66 |
Vinh
Long |
44.66 |
Vietnam
Wide Rate |
63.88 |
|
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Source:
Notice of Final Antidumping Duty Determination
of Sales at
Less Than Fair Value and Affirmative
Critical Circumstances: Certain
Frozen Fish Fillets from the Socialist
Republic of Vietnam,
US Department of Commerce, June 17th,
2003 |
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The ITC, the highest authority within the US
government on international trade issues,
subsequently approved this final determination on
July 23rd, 2003. Since domestic legislation on anti
dumping or protectionist laws regulating product
standard rules overrides bilateral trade agreements,
the BTA between the two countries is unable to give
any reprieve or confer any free trade advantages to
Vietnam in this case. This however, puts into
question the usefulness of such bilateral trade
pacts between two countries that is supposed to
offer mutual benefits to the signatories. If worst
comes to worst, it might start off a trade war
between the two. However in that eventuality, as is
the fate of developing countries, Vietnam has much
more to lose than its 'free-trade' partner.
Throughout the process, there were many protests by
VASEP to the charges. The first of these was that
Vietnam should not be considered a non-market
economy. More importantly, Indian and Bangladesh
prices do not properly reflect the price situation
in Vietnam. Even more unfair, pointed out VASEP, was
the fact that DoC used retail prices as a surrogate
for wholesale prices in Vietnam. In addition, since
the Vietnamese farmers were using American produced
fish feed, that component of costs, a major one,
could hardly be underestimated. Add to that the fact
that no company in Vietnam nor the Vietnamese
government was in the financial position to be able
to subsidize their exports, either for a significant
amount of time or a major quantity of products.
VASEP denounced the decision on catfish, saying it
showed how "a small group of fillet breeders in some
southern states of the U.S. can put pressure on
American authorities" to ignore the principles of
competition and free trade it preaches worldwide.
But this did not change the decision of the DoC or
the ITC. However, apparently the ITC did find that
some miscalculation had taken place in calculation
of the 63.88% margin and will probably re-calculate
the dumping margin. But this is likely to be a minor
change in the duty figure(s) and not a major shift
in policy.
Shrimps: Another Victim in
the Wings?
This is just the beginning of Vietnam's worries.
Further problems plague the seafood industry, the
third highest export, in Vietnam. After the
successful campaign against Vietnamese catfish,
shrimps seem the obvious next target. US Shrimpers,
especially from the Louisiana state that contributes
40% of the total shrimp production of the country,
are all set to follow the example of catfish. They
claim that pond raised cheap shrimp from Vietnam and
other Asian and Latin American countries are
flooding the American market and driving shrimp
prices to the floor. The tentative list of countries
to be targeted comprise of 16 countries including
Brazil, China, Ecuador, India, Thailand and Vietnam.
For Vietnam, this would bring even deeper trouble
than the catfish tariffs. Shrimp is the third
highest export after crude oil and textiles and
contributes the highest share of its seafood
exports. The US is also its largest market as
figures for 2002 show. Valued at 467 million US$,
exports to the US accounts for 48% of Vietnamese
seafood exports. A huge number of farmers in Vietnam
are dependent on shrimp production and exports. It
affects the whole of the country rather than a
specific region as in the case of catfish. The fact
that Vietnam has already been tagged a non-market
economy, makes it even more vulnerable compared to
other countries in the 'offenders' list. Further,
being poor and small, its ability to defend itself
is much lower compared to countries like Brazil,
China and India.
In the case of shrimp, however, there are two
factors that Vietnam might be able to make use of.
First, the issue is much larger here and involves
many big countries in the developing world.
Therefore, any protectionist move on part of the US
may land this dispute before the WTO. Even though
Vietnam is not yet a member of WTO, if the US is
prevented from imposing anti dumping tariffs on its
member countries it should lose the moral
justification to carry forward a similar anti
dumping suit against Vietnam. However, the record of
US morals, especially in trade negotiations, has not
been very strong. But there is another more material
problem that may arise for the US shrimp farmers.
Since shrimp has a huge market in America, slapping
anti dumping duties that raise the price of shrimps
in the American domestic market may urge the large
consumer base to actively oppose any such attempts.
This should be a matter of some concern for the
Department of Commerce.
Conclusion
The issue now affects the very poor catfish farmers
of Vietnam in the Mekong Delta and may in future
affect the whole country. Fish farmers in Vietnam
are generally poor and operate on a very small
scale. Apart from desperately needing good sales for
making ends meet, many have the additional problem
of paying off old production debts. Many poor
farmers had already mortgaged their land for buying
fish cages. Shrimp farmers are also heavily indebted
after investing in drenches and ponds. In addition,
most of the seafood farmers are based in the poorest
parts of the country, where agriculture is not very
productive given high soil salinity and frequent
flooding of agricultural land.
The protectionist antics of a country that prides
itself on pushing trade openness has unfairly robbed
Vietnam's seafood farmers of the opportunity to come
out of indebtedness and make a decent living on the
basis of hard work. It also robs them of the
advantage to make profitable use of their natural
resources. In addition, this is one of only a few
cases where low labour costs (and low opportunity
cost of labour) can actually confer certain
advantages, at least in part, to the poor in
developing economies. This is so because the farmers
themselves are very poor and also use a lot of
family labour. But this is evidently not so in a
system of free trade that is propagated by the US.
Moreover, the fact that the Byrd amendment of US
law, entitles companies that initiate such
anti-dumping legal suits to revenues from such
anti-dumping duties, is a further affront to the
poor farmers in Vietnam. By a WTO ruling, this
amendment is to be repealed but it would still be in
effect till the end of 2003. So the American farmers
are still set to make an additional monetary gain
from these duties.
Under the circumstances, Vietnam has no choice but
to go on with its seafood production, diversify both
its export products and markets, cross its fingers
and hope for the best! It is an irony that such
protectionism has come from the US whereas the US
and the EU are the very powers that have been intent
on prizing open developing economies to free trade.
The US has clearly shown that free trade for the
powerful is the freedom to use every backdoor tactic
to ensure that trade is protected according to the
dictates of their own interests.
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