2004
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.614864
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The Spread of Antidumping Regimes and the Role of Retaliation in Filings

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Cited by 43 publications
(62 citation statements)
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“…They consider antidumping duties as allowed under certain contingencies in the WTO Anti-dumping Agreement. Motivated by empirical work by Blonigen and Bown (2003), Feinberg and Reynolds (2006), and Prusa and Skeath (2002) that provides evidence of a retaliatory role for antidumping duties, Martin and Vergote argue that such on-equilibrium-path retaliation may facilitate efficiency gains by ensuring that the home government protects its import-competing industry with an antidumping duty only when the current importance of that industry to the home government is sufficiently great. In this case, when the home government imposes an antidumping duty, a link is forged to a future retaliatory antidumping duty of the foreign country.…”
Section: Contingent Protection Such As Safeguards and Antidumpingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They consider antidumping duties as allowed under certain contingencies in the WTO Anti-dumping Agreement. Motivated by empirical work by Blonigen and Bown (2003), Feinberg and Reynolds (2006), and Prusa and Skeath (2002) that provides evidence of a retaliatory role for antidumping duties, Martin and Vergote argue that such on-equilibrium-path retaliation may facilitate efficiency gains by ensuring that the home government protects its import-competing industry with an antidumping duty only when the current importance of that industry to the home government is sufficiently great. In this case, when the home government imposes an antidumping duty, a link is forged to a future retaliatory antidumping duty of the foreign country.…”
Section: Contingent Protection Such As Safeguards and Antidumpingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…12 During the second part of the preliminary phase, the US Department of Commerce makes a preliminary determination of dumping against each country j listed in a petition. 13 The dumping margin for country j is calculated as the difference in the price charged by country j producers in the US and country j,the US and a third market, or the difference between the price charged in the US price and the average total cost of production of a firm in country j. Preliminary dumping margins vary considerably across countries listed within a petition, with the USDOC occasionally finding that there is no evidence of dumping by some countries that have been found guilty of causing injury.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Blonigen and Bown(2003) find that strategic considerations, in particular the share of US exports in the potential target country, can influence the decision by the US to file an AD case. Aggarwal (2004), Feinberg and Reynolds (2006) also find a positive relationship between retaliation and AD filings. Dong (2013) argues that the underlying reasons for AD should be strategic in nature, in particular, retaliatory.…”
Section: Strategic Determinants Of Antidumpingmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…However, the nature of the relationship is subject to some ambiguity. On the one hand, Feinberg and Reynolds (2006) argue that trade liberalization, and the associated lowering of traditional sources of protection, has been associated with increased AD use in some developing countries. Similarly, Bown and Tovar (2011) conclude that Indian trade liberalization efforts may have increased the probability of AD filings.…”
Section: Macroeconomic Determinants Of Antidumpingmentioning
confidence: 99%