Posted on 23 Sep 2015
Vietnamese steel products face anti-dumping investigations
Analysts said that steel was one of several products that regularly face
anti-dumping investigations conducted by importing countries.
Deputy director of the Competition Administration Department (CAD)
Nguyen Phuong Nam, confirming the news, said MITI would send
questionnaires to Vietnamese steel manufacturers, while domestic
manufacturers could ask MITI for questionnaires.
According to the Ministry of Industry and Trade, Malaysia imported
around 151,000 tons of steel worth $110 million from Vietnam in 2014.
Prior to that, the Australian Anti-Dumping Commission (ADC) conducted an
investigation over zinc-coated (galvanised) steel imported from
Vietnam.
The probe finished last month when ADC stated that Vietnamese galvanised
steel shipped to Australia was not sold at dumping prices, therefore
posing no threat to Australia’s domestic steel production.
Professor Nguyen Thi Mo from the International Arbitration Center (IAC)
noted that the majority of Vietnamese enterprises subject to the
investigations did not have deep knowledge about the laws and the
management mechanisms applied by the import countries.
Mo also noted that in many cases, Vietnamese businesses could not
anticipate risks and they signed contracts without legal instruments to
protect their benefits.
When negotiating with foreign partners, businesses only paid attention
to some basic provisions on quantity, quality, prices and payment
methods, while they ignored the provisions on fines and compensation for
damages.
Meanwhile, Le Sy Giang, an expert in competition, noted that steel
products regularly face anti-dumping lawsuits because steel has a wide
range of products and a high investment rate.
Most countries want to protect their local steel manufacturers.
Vietnam’s steel products face more lawsuits because Vietnamese
enterprises only focus on some phases of the steel production chain that
require low production costs.
Hoa Phat is the only Vietnamese enterprise which makes steel from ore.
It mostly makes black steel, and cannot make high-end products. Other
steel manufacturers have to import ingot steel to make finished
products.
Vietnam’s steel industry has experienced a ‘hot development stage’, but
Vietnamese enterprises have not prepared well enough to join the ‘global
playing field’.
They have been relying on low labor costs to compete with foreign products.
A CAD report shows that Vietnam is one of the countries which have many
categories of products subject to anti-dumping investigations: 52 cases
have been initiated by 15 importing countries so far, while 29 percent
of the cases were related to steel products.