Posted on 10 Mar 2016
Vietnam slaps new tariffs on steel imports to protect local industry
The Ministry of Industry and Trade announced on Tuesday that
additional tariffs will be levied on imported steel products as a
temporary safeguard measure against cheap imports which have allegedly
threatened the local industry.
The new tariffs, 23.3 percent for steel billets and 14.2 percent
for steel rods, will take effect this March 22 and end as late as
October 7.
They, however, will not be applicable for products from developing
countries such as Cambodia and Indonesia, whose steel exports to Vietnam
account for less than 3 percent of the country's total imports.
Vietnam is already imposing trade tariffs of up to 20 percent to these products.
The ministry said it will continue with an investigation launched
at the end of last year into possible injury caused by steel imports.
Initial findings suggested that the recent surge of imports has
caused "serious damage" to local production of steel billets and rods,
according to the ministry's latest announcement.
Imported steel billets have undercut local products since 2014,
especially after prices of imports were lowered by 30 percent last year,
it said.
Local producers posted "near zero" profits last year as they had to sell their products cheap, the ministry said.
Import flood
Vietnam imported more than 592,000 tons of steel billets in 2014,
up 69.7 percent from the previous year, the ministry reported, citing
figures from the customs.
Last year imports surged 218 percent to nearly 1.89 million tons,
compared to an increase of 5-10 percent of the sales of domestic
products.
Similar findings were reported about steel rods whose imports had outnumbered local sales since 2012.
More than 1.28 million tons of steel rods were brought into Vietnam
last year, up 47 percent from 2014, while local producers posted
increases of 15-25 percent in sales.
The market shares of local steel billets and rods have continuously
shrunk since 2013, while imported products' shares have kept
increasing, the ministry said.
It said local producers saw rises in their stockpiles, especially
last year when the stockpile of steel billets grew 37 percent, and rods
39 percent.
The ministry's investigation has divided local steel producers with
four major companies, Hoa Phat, Southern Steel, Thai Nguyen, and
Vietnam-Italy Steel, claiming that cheap imports have deeply hurt their
business.
Many others, on the other hand, called for a halt to the
investigation, saying that unlike big companies they depend on imported
steel billets for production and high duties will increase their input
costs, which, in turn, will squeeze profit margin.