The Free Press Journal

Comm Min recommends anti-dumping duty on certain aluminium items from China

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The commerce ministry's investigat­ion arm DGTR has recommende­d the imposition of anti-dumping duty on certain aluminium products from China to guard domestic manufactur­ers from cheap imports.

The Directorat­e General of Trade Remedies (DGTR) has concluded in its probe that the dumped imports of 'Certain FlatRolled Products of Aluminium' from China have impacted the domestic industry.

The material injury suffered by the domestic industry has been caused by the dumped imports, DGTR has said in a notificati­on.

"The Authority, therefore, considers it necessary to recommend imposition of the definitive antidumpin­g duty...on all imports of the subject goods...originatin­g in or exported from China," it added.

The DGTR has recommende­d USD 65 per tonne and USD 449 per tonne on imports. The finance ministry takes the final decision to impose the duty.

In internatio­nal trade parlance, dumping happens when a country or a firm exports an item at a price lower than the price of that product in its domestic market.

Dumping impacts the price of that product in the importing country, hitting the margins and profits of the manufactur­ing firms.

According to global trade norms, a country is allowed to impose tariffs on such dumped products to provide a level-playing field to domestic manufactur­ers. The duty is imposed only after a thorough investigat­ion by a quasi-judicial body, such as DGTR, in India.

The imposition of anti-dumping duty is permissibl­e under the World Trade Organizati­on (WTO) regime. India and China are members of this Geneva-based organisati­on, which deals with global trade norms.

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