Publication
Aug 2008
This paper investigates the effects of US antidumping actions on developing countries. It first considers administrative actions by the US Department of Commerce (USDOC), which decides antidumping margins for countries. It then considers decision-making by the US International Trade Commission, which determines injury to domestic industry. The econometric results show that USDOC actions lead to significantly higher antidumping margins for nonmarket economies than for market-oriented economies.
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English (PDF, 46 pages, 596 KB) |
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Author | Morris Morkre, Dean Spinanger, Lien Tran |
Series | Kiel Institute Working Papers |
Issue | 1438 |
Publisher | Kiel Institute for the World Economy |
Copyright | © 2008 Kiel Institute for the World Economy |