
#13
Jamestown Foundation
Russia and Eurasia Review
Volume 1, Issue 2
June 18, 2002
BE CAREFUL WHAT YOU WISH FOR
By Harry Kopp
Russians who sought and won U.S. recognition as a market-economy country are
in for a shock. Acting on a request filed last year by two Russian steel
companies, the U.S. Department of Commerce declared Russia a market economy on
June 6. The decision followed a nine-month investigation into Russian policies
and practices in five areas: currency convertibility, negotiation of wage rates,
foreign investment, government control of production and government control of
resource allocation.
The Commerce Department's decision is retroactive to April 1. The department
said it deliberately withheld the announcement beyond the May Bush-Putin summit,
to make clear that its decision was taken purely on the merits and was not
politically motivated. Nevertheless, press reports say President Bush called
President Putin with the news. Readers are forgiven if they chalk this action up
as a late "deliverable."
Economy Minister German Gref hailed the news. Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov
said he was "deeply satisfied."
What's it all about?
United States and international trade law protects domestic producers against
cheap imports dumped by foreign exporters or subsidized by foreign governments.
Goods are considered "dumped" when the price for export to the United
States is below the price at which they sell in their home market, or when the
export price is below the cost of production. Goods are subsidized when
government benefits, direct or indirect, bring their prices down. When dumped or
subsidized imports injure American producers, the U.S. government can impose
penalty tariffs equal to the margin of dumping or the size of the subsidy.
But the United States does not apply these rules to exports from nonmarket
economies, where domestic costs and prices do not reflect relative scarcities or
supply and demand. Instead, the United States considers a product from a
nonmarket economy "dumped" if its price is below the cost of
production in some third country. If Belarusan widgets, for example, are sold to
the United States for less than the cost of making widgets in Spain, the United
States might slap antidumping tariffs on the Belarusan widgets to raise their
prices. And recognizing the impossibility of calculating subsidies in
state-controlled economies, the United States does not apply its antisubsidy
trade laws to nonmarket imports at all.
As a market-economy country, Russian goods will now face the same generous
treatment that U.S. import-administration authorities apply to goods from Korea,
or Brazil, or India. In particular, imports from Russia that entered the United
States after April 1, 2002, the effective date of the Commerce ruling, will for
the first time be vulnerable to challenge as subsidized products. And in Russia
many basic inputs--electric power, fuel, transportation, workers' benefits--are
heavily subsidized, as is much of the industrial infrastructure acquired by its
present owners at a tiny fraction of its real value.
It is safe to say that Russian imports into the United States are far more
open to attack now than before. Attorneys for import-competing American
industries are no doubt preparing their briefs. Although American authorities
may find from time to time that Russian imports do not injure U.S. producers,
and so cannot be penalized, for many years to come they will rarely if ever find
that Russian imports are not subsidized.
Welcome, Russia, to the marketplace. Bring your lawyers.
Harry Kopp is executive editor of Russia and Eurasia Review.
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