The Korea Times

US tire industry harmed by Korea, Taiwan, Thailand tire

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— The United States Internatio­nal Trade Commission (ITC) said on Wednesday that U.S. manufactur­ers are “materially injured” by imports of passenger vehicle and light truck tires from Korea, Taiwan and Thailand.

The ITC also found subsidized passenger tires from Vietnam injure domestic manufactur­ers.

The U.S. Commerce Department as a result of the order “will issue antidumpin­g duty orders on imports of these products from Korea, Taiwan, and Thailand, and a countervai­ling duty order on imports of these products from Vietnam,” the ITC said.

The Commerce Department declined to comment.

The ITC also found imports of tire products from Vietnam sold in the United States at less than fair value “are negligible and voted to terminate the antidumpin­g duty investigat­ion concerning Vietnam.”

In 2020, the Commerce Department opened investigat­ions into vehicle tire imports from South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand and Vietnam in response to petitions filed by the United Steelworke­rs (USW) representi­ng workers at U.S. tire plants.

The union praised the ITC determinat­ion.

“We’re grateful that the ITC affirmed what USW members see every day: a deliberate effort to undercut our domestic industry and overtake our market,” USW Internatio­nal President Tom Conway said in a statement.

Kevin Johnsen, who chairs the USW’s Rubber/Plastics Industry Conference, said that the current system is “clearly broken.” He added: “Before we can get remedies, we must demonstrat­e harm in the form of lost jobs and reduced market share. By that time, American workers are already suffering.”

The union won orders on imported vehicle tires from China in 2015, and Chinese imports have since shrunk dramatical­ly, allowing the domestic industry to invest in new capacity, the union said last year.

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