Bangkok Post

US talks geared to curb China runaround

- PHUSADEE ARUNMAS

Thai trade officials this week will talk with their US customs counterpar­ts to find ways to prevent circumvent­ion practices and the redirectio­n of Chinese products to Thailand that are subject to higher tariffs under the Trump administra­tion.

Wanchai Varavithya, deputy directorge­neral of the Foreign Trade Department, said department officials will also cooperate with US customs representa­tives in Thailand to share trade informatio­n about Thai products likely to be hit by higher US import tariffs, as well as the quantities of such products shipped every year.

“This will help cross-check informatio­n to determine whether Thailand is producing these goods,” Mr Wanchai said. “The informatio­n could help curb attempts to circumvent the higher US tariffs.”

Circumvent­ion practices i nclude making minor modificati­ons to goods but leaving their essential characteri­stics unaltered; the export of goods (with minor modificati­ons) from third countries; and the exporter reducing prices to skirt the full extent of dumping duties, thereby prolonging the injury intended to be prevented.

Mr Wanchai said the US administra­tion itself is concerned that certain foreign firms may relocate production to Thailand and re-export to the US market after President Donald Trump on March 8 ordered a steep 25% tariff on steel and 10% tariff on aluminium imports into the US, citing national security considerat­ions under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962.

“The US, in particular, is afraid that there may be circumvent­ion through trans-shipment and assembly operations in Thailand, with products being imported from countries subject to US tariff hikes and anti-dumping measures, and then reexported to subrogate the import rights of Thai-made products,” he said.

Mr Wanchai said US officials have noted that diamond saw blades, clothes hangers and nails are products for which circumvent­ion has potentiall­y occurred.

An investigat­ion is under way, while the department has said companies that are found to have circumvent­ed the measures will be put on a blacklist and have their certificat­es of origin revoked by the Commerce Ministry.

Regarding the latest efforts to prevent circumvent­ion, Mr Wanchai said the Foreign Trade Department has asked for cooperatio­n from the Customs Department to devise stricter controls on imports and exports, particular­ly for items sensitive to higher US tariffs.

The department has also given Customs the lists of products subject to higher US tariffs and anti-dumping measures, as well as the names of foreign companies suspected of subrogatin­g Thai import rights.

The department has asked for cooperatio­n from the Federation of Thai Industries and the Board of Trade to help inspect practices.

In June, Deputy Commerce Minister Chutima Bunyapraph­asara said the government was drafting a watch list for items expected to be redirected into Thailand in light of higher retaliator­y tariffs by China and the US in a bid to mitigate harm from the two countries’ deepening trade spat, as Thailand could become a dumping ground for their products, affecting local industries.

More importantl­y, Mr Wanchai said a draft amendment to the Anti-Dumping and Countervai­ling (ADC) Act prepared by the Commerce Ministry to protect domestic entreprene­urs, with a new chapter regarding anti-circumvent­ion penalties, is being proposed to the National Legislativ­e Assembly.

The amendment would empower the Anti-Dumping and Countervai­ling Board to carry out an investigat­ion into suspected circumvent­ion and impose anti-circumvent­ion duties in response.

If circumvent­ion is found to be taking place, the anti-dumping or countervai­ling duties imposed in the original investigat­ion will be extended to the product from the circumvent­ing third country, to the parts/components of the product, or to the slightly modified product, depending on the individual case.

The Commerce Ministry over the years has received many complaints from domestic industries, saying that since the ADC Act came into force foreign manufactur­ers and exporters to Thailand have been circumvent­ing anti-dumping or countervai­ling duties by various means.

Some methods include modifying a product so that it can be classified under a combined nomenclatu­re code that is not subject to duties; exporting through a producer with a lower duty rate; or exporting a product in parts and having it assembled in Thailand, where the parts are not subject to duties.

These practices are detrimenta­l to domestic industries and rendered the anti-dumping and countervai­ling duties ineffectiv­e for many years.

Seven steel-related groups have called on the government to step up applying anti-circumvent­ion duties to curb related imports, saying foreign steel exporters have been exploring loopholes and opportunit­ies to avoid the anti-dumping and countervai­ling duties.

Mr Wanchai expects the new act to come into force later this year.

The US, in particular, is afraid that there may be circumvent­ion through trans-shipment and assembly operations in Thailand. WANCHAI VARAVITHYA Deputy director-general, Foreign Trade Department

 ?? AP ?? A billboard displays prices for fresh produce outside a Walmart store in Beijing. Thai officials will meet US counterpar­ts this week to voice concerns over the fallout from the China-US trade spat.
AP A billboard displays prices for fresh produce outside a Walmart store in Beijing. Thai officials will meet US counterpar­ts this week to voice concerns over the fallout from the China-US trade spat.

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