WTO rules against US safeguard measures on steel
Eliza
Patterson
On November 10, 2003 the World Trade Organisation Appellate Body issued
its report in the complaint brought by Brazil, China, the European Communities,
Japan, Korea, New Zealand, Norway, and Switzerland against the US imposition
of safeguard measures on certain steel products. The Appellate Body upheld
a prior Panel ruling that the US measures were inconsistent with the WTO
Safeguards Agreement and GATT 1994. Consequently the Appellate Body recommended
that the WTO Dispute Settlement Body request the US to bring its measures
into conformity.
Background
In June 2001, the US International Trade Commission (USITC) initiated
a safeguard investigation under Section 201 of the Trade Act of 1974 at
the request of the US Trade Representative in order to determine whether
certain steel products were being imported into the United States "in
such increased quantities as to cause or threaten to cause serious injury
to the domestic industry producing like or directly competitive products.
Pursuant to the investigation the USITC made affirmative determinations
for numerous steel product categories under investigation and recommended
that tariffs be increased on those products. Based on the USITC recommendation,
President Bush, on March 5, 2002, signed a proclamation imposing increased
tariffs on imports of ten categories of steel products. The duties, referred
to as "safeguard measures," ranged from 30% to 8% and went into
effect on March 20, 2002, for a period of three years.
On June 3, 2002, a WTO dispute settlement panel was established at the
request of the European Communities to examine the consistency of the
US safeguard measures with WTO rules. Complaints on the same matter by
Japan, Korea, China, Norway, Switzerland, New Zealand and Brazil were
subsequently submitted to the same Panel.
The
Agreement on Safeguards and Article XIX of GATT 1994 provide that a WTO
member may apply safeguard measures only if, following an investigation
by competent authorities, it determines that imports have increased, that
the increase was a result of unforeseen developments and that the increased
imports have caused, or threatened to cause, its domestic industry to
suffer serious injury. The Agreement further provides that the competent
authorities must issue a "report setting forth their findings and
reasoned conclusions reached on all pertinent issues of fact and law."
The Panel concluded that all ten US safeguard measures were inconsistent
with the Agreement on Safeguards and the GATT 1994. Specifically, the
Panel found that the US had failed to "provide a reasoned and adequate
explanation of their conclusion" (1) that imports had increased;
(2) that a causal link existed between the increased imports and serious
injury to the domestic industry; and (3) that the increased imports had
resulted from "unforeseen developments." The Panel recommended
that the Dispute Settlement Body request that the US bring all the safeguard
measures into conformity with its WTO obligations. On August 14, 2003,
the US appealed the Panel ruling.
The
Appellate body's ruling
The Appellate Body's ruling on November 10 largely upheld the initial
Panel's conclusions, specifically its focus on the inadequacy of the US
explanation of how the facts supported the conclusion that each of the
elements of a safeguard case had been met. It is noteworthy that the WTO
violation resulted from the inadequacy of explanation and not from a fault
in US law. The Appellate Body emphasised throughout its report that safeguard
measures were considered extraordinary measures and that consequently
WTO members had an obligation to clearly set forth the rationale for their
determinations.
On the question of increased imports, the Appellate Body ruled that the
USITC failed to provide a reason and adequate explanation of how the facts
supported its determination that the increase in imports had been recent
enough, sudden enough, sharp enough and significant enough to cause serious
injury.
On the issue of "unforeseen developments," the Appellate Body
similarly concluded that the USITC report was wanting in reasoning. The
USITC had found that the Asian and Russian financial crisis, together
with the strong US dollar and economy, were the cause of the increased
imports and that those economic developments were "unforeseen."
The Appellate Body did not question the existence of those developments
or the claim that they were unforeseen. Neither did it question that the
developments might have caused the import surge. Rather, it ruled that
USITC had failed to provide a logical explanation of how such causation
actually occurred.
The Appellate Body declined to rule on the general question of whether
the USITC had failed to demonstrate a causal link between increased imports
and serious injury, viewing such a decision as unnecessary in light of
the other violations.
The
aftermath
The Appellate Body Report is set to be adopted by the Dispute Settlement
Body. If the US does not comply with the ruling by removing the safeguard
tariffs, the EU and other complainants are expected to seek, and receive,
DSB authorisation to raise duties on imports from the US in amounts equal
to the trade lost by their steel companies as a result of the illegal
US safeguard measures. The combined retaliation will affect several billion
dollars worth of US exports.
The US is currently seeking a compromise solution that will enable it
to continue some protection for the US steel industry while avoiding foreign
retaliation. To date the EU has rejected compromise, arguing that the
WTO ruling was clear and that the US must withdraw the illegal safeguard
measures or face retaliation.
Source:
American Society of International Law (ASIL).