Key Points

South Korea's trade watchdog has recommended accepting a price hike proposal from Chinese steel companies to address dumping concerns. The Korea Trade Commission suggests this approach after determining that Chinese exporters were selling steel at excessively low prices. For firms not proposing price increases, anti-dumping tariffs of up to 34.1% may be imposed. This decision comes amid broader challenges in the global steel market, including U.S. tariffs and Chinese product oversupply.

Key Points: S. Korea Accepts Chinese Steel Price Hike to Combat Dumping

  • Korea Trade Commission proposes price solution for Chinese steel exporters
  • Baospan Iron & Steel and Jiangsu Shagang among nine recommended firms
  • Initial investigation launched after Hyundai Steel's complaint about low-priced imports
  • Recommendation aims to prevent damage to Korean steel industry
2 min read

S. Korea recommends accepting Chinese steel firms' price hike as anti-dumping measure

South Korea's trade watchdog recommends price undertaking from Chinese steel firms to mitigate anti-dumping concerns and protect domestic industry

"The KTC will recommend anti-dumping tariffs of up to 34.1 percent for the next five years - Korea Trade Commission"

Seoul, Aug 28

South Korea's trade watchdog on Thursday recommended the government accept a proposal from Chinese steel companies to raise export prices of their hot-rolled carbon and alloy steel plates over the next five years as part of anti-dumping remedies.

The Korea Trade Commission (KTC) said it has decided to make such a recommendation to the Ministry of Economy and Finance for nine Chinese steel exporters, including Baoshan Iron & Steel Co. and Jiangsu Shagang Steel Co, reports Yonhap news agency.

The companies have proposed a price undertaking after the KTC reached a preliminary decision in February to impose anti-dumping duties, having determined that the exporters inflicted damage on the Korean steel industry by selling their products here at excessively low prices.

The KTC said it will recommend the ministry levy anti-dumping tariffs of up to 34.1 percent for the next five years on other Chinese companies that did not make such proposals.

Trade authorities launched an investigation into the case in October, three months after Hyundai Steel Co. filed a complaint with the government against competing low-priced thick steel plate imports from China.

Thursday's decision comes amid mounting concerns in the Korean steel industry, faced with 50 percent tariffs on all steel imports imposed by the U.S. government and an oversupply of cheap products from China.

In July, the trade watchdog made a preliminary decision to impose anti-dumping tariffs on hot-rolled steel plates from Japan and China after its initial investigation identified potential damage to the domestic industry.

To prevent further damage during the upcoming formal investigation period, the KTC also recommended imposing anti-dumping tariffs of 43.35 percent on optical fibre products from the two countries.

The KTC launched its investigation into alleged dumping by six Japanese firms, including JFE Shoji Corp., and five Chinese producers, such as Benxi Iron and Steel Group, following a complaint filed by Hyundai Steel Co., a leading South Korean steelmaker.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Interesting approach - accepting price hikes instead of just imposing duties. This might actually work better for maintaining trade relationships while protecting local industry. Smart move by South Korea!
Aman W
Chinese companies always find ways to dump products in other markets. Our Indian steel companies like Tata and JSW face similar challenges. Hope our government learns from this Korean approach 🤔
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Michael C
While anti-dumping measures are necessary, we must be careful not to start trade wars. The 34.1% duty on non-compliant companies seems quite high. Balance is key in international trade.
S
Shreya B
Chinese oversupply is a global problem affecting steel industries everywhere. India should coordinate with countries like South Korea to address this issue collectively. Strength in numbers! 💪
V
Vikram M
Good to see countries taking strong action. Our Indian steel workers deserve protection from unfair trade practices. Hope our authorities are watching and learning from this case.

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