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Top News

US panel approves duties on washers from Mexico, South Korea

Published January 23, 2013 Updated January 23, 2013 05:03pm

us tradeWASHINGTON: A US trade panel on Wednesday gave final approval to anti-dumping duties on hundreds of millions of dollars of residential washing machines from Mexico and South Korea in a case brought by American manufacturer Whirlpool.

 

The US International Trade Commission voted 6-0 that the century-old US manufacturer had been materially harmed, or at least was threatened with material injury, by the imports.

 

The action clears the way for the Commerce Department to issue five-year duty orders on the imports.

 

For Whirlpool, the decision is far better than the result in another case it brought against refrigerator imports from Mexico and South Korea. In that case, the commission voted last year to block duties set by the Commerce Department.

 

Marc Bitzer, president of Whirlpool North America, called the decision "a great victory for the US appliance industry, especially for our employees and consumers."

 

 "We expect this ruling will restore a level competitive playing field that enables Whirlpool and other US manufacturers to continue investing in America to produce the high-quality, innovative products that consumers deserve," Bitzer said.

 

The United States imported $434 million worth of washers from Mexico in 2011 and $568 million from South Korea.

 

The department announced last month that its investigation found Mexican manufacturers were "dumping" the washers in the United States at prices 36.52 to 72.41 percent below fair market value and it set duties accordingly.

 

It said South Korean producers were undercutting prices by 9.29 percent to 82.41 percent. The department also set countervailing duties of 0.01 percent to 72.30 percent on the South Korean washers to offset government subsidies it found in its investigation.

 

South Korean producers Daewoo, LG Electronics Inc , and Samsung were found to be dumping at prices 82.41 percent, 13.02 percent, and 9.29 percent, respectively, below fair market value.

 

Daewoo, which the Commerce Department said failed to cooperate in the investigation, was also hit with a 72.03 percent countervailing duty, while the two other companies received rates of below 2 percent.

 

Mexican producers Electrolux, Samsung Electronics Mexico and Whirlpool International received final anti-dumping duties of 36.52 percent, 72.41 percent, and 72.41 percent, respectively.

 

Whirlpool has previously said that it had stopped shipping washers from Mexico for sale in the United States and therefore would not have to pay any duties.

 

Copyright Reuters, 2013

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