Developments in Anti-Dumping Arrangements - Research Paper.
Second, we find that industries that use antidumping are more likely to face the changing economic conditions specified by the technical evidentiary criteria of the WTO Antidumping Agreement: industries that face rapidly falling import prices are more likely to pursue an investigation, and industries that are more susceptible to cyclical dumping due to greater capital investment expenditures.
Under World Trade Organization (WTO) rules VI—Anti-Dumping Agreement—of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994 (GATT 1994)), dumping is discouraged and countries are authorized to adopt anti-dumping measures, when dumping and material injury resulting from it has occurred to the domestic industry producing the like product or one product that has mainly the same characteristics of.
Literature Review- Anti-Dumping in Usa .research was done on the topic until pioneering paper of Finger, Hall, and Nelson (1982). The study focuses on the period prior to 1980 and revels the following: the number of antidumping investigations conducted in the late 1930s and the late 1950s and early 1960s are surprisingly large and comparable to the post-1980s levels of activity; most.
US ANTI-DUMPING ACTIVITY IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE 651. research on the topic until the pioneering paper of Finger, Hall and Nelson (1982). Since then, research on AD policy has focused almost exclusively on the. have a material injury test as required by the Uruguay Round’s Anti-dumping Agreement. In 2000.
The WTO Anti-dumping Agreement, or more formally the Agreement on the Implementation of Article VI of the GATT, allows governments to act against dumping where there is genuine (“material”) injury to the competing domestic industry.
Melbourne Law School Legal Studies Research Paper No. 243 September 2007 Review of Edwin Vermulst, The WTO Anti-Dumping Agreement: A Commentary Tania Voon.
Download file to see previous pages Anti-dumping policies are typically rationalized on the basis that they are necessary for eliminating harmful dumping practices by exporters and to promote fair competition in trade (Davis, 2009). Even so, research demonstrates that despite the fact that the WTO’s anti-dumping policies are intended to protect the interests of domestic producers and to.