TitleEffects of US Antidumping under the Byrd Amendment: The Case of Catfish
Publication TypeConference Proceedings
Year of Publication2008
AuthorsDuc, NM, Kinnucan, H
EditorMumford, J, Leach, A
Conference NameFourteenth Biennial Conference of the International Institute of Fisheries Economics & Trade, July 22-25, 2008, Nha Trang, Vietnam: Achieving a Sustainable Future: Managing Aquaculture, Fishing, Trade and Development
Date Published2008
PublisherInternational Institute of Fisheries Economics & Trade
Conference LocationCorvallis, Oregon
Keywordsantidumping, byrd amendment, catfish tariff, trade policy
Abstract

The Byrd Amendment permits US firms that petition successfully for antidumping duties to collect tariff revenues. Whether these payments strengthen the duty’s ability to raise price depends crucially on market structure. In a competitive market where domestic and imported goods are imperfect substitutes, the payments are akin to a production subsidy and thus undermine the duty’s ability to raise price. Applying the theory to antidumping duties imposed by the United States on catfish imports from Vietnam, a three-equation model estimated using monthly data from January 1999 to August 2006 showed the duties to have had a modest yet positive effect on the US price. Although the weak price effect is consistent with supply enlargement induced by the payments, our econometric results suggest substitution effects coupled with incidence shifting are stronger causal factors.

URLhttp://oregonstate.edu/dept/IIFET/publications.html
Notice of Publication Number

NOP 08-A09 (English)