Jacobi Carbons AB v. United States
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Opinion
Barnett, Judge:
This matter is before the court following the U.S. Department of Commerce's ("Commerce" or "the agency") second redetermination upon remand in this case. See Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Court Remand ("2nd Remand Results"), ECF No. 133-1.
Plaintiffs Jacobi Carbons AB and Jacobi Carbons, Inc. (together, "Jacobi") and Plaintiff-Intervenors
1
(collectively, with Jacobi, "Plaintiffs") initiated these consolidated cases challenging several aspects of Commerce's final results in the seventh administrative review ("AR7") of the antidumping duty order on certain activated carbon from the People's Republic of China ("PRC" or "China").
See
Certain Activated Carbon from the People's Republic of China
,
On April 7, 2017, the court remanded Commerce's surrogate country selection (specifically, its determinations regarding
economic comparability generally and significant production of comparable merchandise by Thailand in particular); sustained Commerce's authority to deduct irrecoverable VAT from CEP while remanding its calculation methodology as lacking substantial evidence; and deferred resolving Plaintiffs' arguments regarding Thai surrogate values pending the results of Commerce's remand redetermination.
See
Jacobi Carbons AB v. United States
("
Jacobi (AR7) I
"), 41 CIT ----,
On August 10, 2017, Commerce filed its first remand redetermination.
See
Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Court Remand ("1st Remand Results"), ECF No. 105-1. Following briefing and oral argument, on April 19, 2018, the court sustained Commerce's economic comparability determination but again remanded the agency's determination that Thailand is a significant producer of comparable merchandise and irrecoverable VAT adjustment, as well as its surrogate value selections for financial ratios and carbonized material.
See
Jacobi Carbons AB v. United States
("
Jacobi (AR7) II
"), 42 CIT ----,
On October 24, 2018, Commerce filed its second remand redetermination. Therein, Commerce affirmed its determination that Thailand is a significant producer of comparable merchandise and its selection of Thai import data as the surrogate value for carbonized material. 2nd Remand Results at 3-8, 15-20. Commerce selected a different Thai source to value financial ratios and reconsidered the basis for its VAT adjustment while continuing to adjust Jacobi's constructed export price for VAT.
See
id.
at 9-15, 20-32. Commerce's redetermination increased Jacobi's weighted-average dumping margin from $ 1.05 per kilogram to $ 1.76 per kilogram.
See
id.
at 53-54;
Final Results
,
Jacobi and CATC filed comments opposing the 2nd Remand Results. See Pls.' Comments on Commerce's Second Remand Determination ("Jacobi's Opp'n Cmts."), ECF No. 138 ; Consol. Pls. Carbon Activated Tianjin Co., Ltd., Jilin Bright Future Chemicals Company, Ltd., Ningxia Mineral and Chemical Limited, Shanxi DMD Corporation, Shanxi Industry Technology Trading Co., Ltd., Shanxi Sincere Industrial Co., Ltd., Tancarb Activated Carbon Co., Ltd., and Tianjin Maijin Industries Co., Ltd. Comments in Opp'n to U.S. Department of Commerce's Second Remand Redetermination ("CATC's Opp'n Cmts."), ECF No. 137. Defendant United States ("the Government") and Defendant-Intervenors Calgon Carbon Corp. and Cabot Norit Americas, Inc. ("Calgon") filed comments in support of the 2nd Remand Results. See Def.'s Reply to Pls.' and Consol. Pls.' Respective Comments on the Second Remand Redetermination ("Def.'s Reply Cmts."), ECF No. 140 ; Def.-Ints.' Comments in Supp. of the Department of Commerce's Remand Redetermination ("Def-Ints.' Reply Cmts."), ECF No. 139.
For the following reasons, the court remands Commerce's determination that Thailand is a significant producer of comparable merchandise and directs Commerce to reconsider its selection of a primary surrogate country. Because Commerce relied on its preference to use data from the primary surrogate country as a basis for selecting the challenged surrogate values, see 2nd Remand Results at 13, 19, the court also remands Commerce's surrogate value selections.
The court sustains Commerce's VAT adjustment.
JURISDICTION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
The court has jurisdiction pursuant to § 516A(a)(2)(B)(iii) of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended, 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(a)(2)(B)(iii) (2012),
4
and
The court will uphold an agency determination that is supported by substantial evidence and otherwise in accordance with law. 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(1)(B)(i). The court's review of Commerce's interpretation and implementation of a statutory scheme is guided by
Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.,
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Barnett, Judge:
This matter is before the court following the U.S. Department of Commerce's ("Commerce" or "the agency") second redetermination upon remand in this case. See Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Court Remand ("2nd Remand Results"), ECF No. 133-1.
Plaintiffs Jacobi Carbons AB and Jacobi Carbons, Inc. (together, "Jacobi") and Plaintiff-Intervenors
1
(collectively, with Jacobi, "Plaintiffs") initiated these consolidated cases challenging several aspects of Commerce's final results in the seventh administrative review ("AR7") of the antidumping duty order on certain activated carbon from the People's Republic of China ("PRC" or "China").
See
Certain Activated Carbon from the People's Republic of China
,
On April 7, 2017, the court remanded Commerce's surrogate country selection (specifically, its determinations regarding
economic comparability generally and significant production of comparable merchandise by Thailand in particular); sustained Commerce's authority to deduct irrecoverable VAT from CEP while remanding its calculation methodology as lacking substantial evidence; and deferred resolving Plaintiffs' arguments regarding Thai surrogate values pending the results of Commerce's remand redetermination.
See
Jacobi Carbons AB v. United States
("
Jacobi (AR7) I
"), 41 CIT ----,
On August 10, 2017, Commerce filed its first remand redetermination.
See
Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Court Remand ("1st Remand Results"), ECF No. 105-1. Following briefing and oral argument, on April 19, 2018, the court sustained Commerce's economic comparability determination but again remanded the agency's determination that Thailand is a significant producer of comparable merchandise and irrecoverable VAT adjustment, as well as its surrogate value selections for financial ratios and carbonized material.
See
Jacobi Carbons AB v. United States
("
Jacobi (AR7) II
"), 42 CIT ----,
On October 24, 2018, Commerce filed its second remand redetermination. Therein, Commerce affirmed its determination that Thailand is a significant producer of comparable merchandise and its selection of Thai import data as the surrogate value for carbonized material. 2nd Remand Results at 3-8, 15-20. Commerce selected a different Thai source to value financial ratios and reconsidered the basis for its VAT adjustment while continuing to adjust Jacobi's constructed export price for VAT.
See
id.
at 9-15, 20-32. Commerce's redetermination increased Jacobi's weighted-average dumping margin from $ 1.05 per kilogram to $ 1.76 per kilogram.
See
id.
at 53-54;
Final Results
,
Jacobi and CATC filed comments opposing the 2nd Remand Results. See Pls.' Comments on Commerce's Second Remand Determination ("Jacobi's Opp'n Cmts."), ECF No. 138 ; Consol. Pls. Carbon Activated Tianjin Co., Ltd., Jilin Bright Future Chemicals Company, Ltd., Ningxia Mineral and Chemical Limited, Shanxi DMD Corporation, Shanxi Industry Technology Trading Co., Ltd., Shanxi Sincere Industrial Co., Ltd., Tancarb Activated Carbon Co., Ltd., and Tianjin Maijin Industries Co., Ltd. Comments in Opp'n to U.S. Department of Commerce's Second Remand Redetermination ("CATC's Opp'n Cmts."), ECF No. 137. Defendant United States ("the Government") and Defendant-Intervenors Calgon Carbon Corp. and Cabot Norit Americas, Inc. ("Calgon") filed comments in support of the 2nd Remand Results. See Def.'s Reply to Pls.' and Consol. Pls.' Respective Comments on the Second Remand Redetermination ("Def.'s Reply Cmts."), ECF No. 140 ; Def.-Ints.' Comments in Supp. of the Department of Commerce's Remand Redetermination ("Def-Ints.' Reply Cmts."), ECF No. 139.
For the following reasons, the court remands Commerce's determination that Thailand is a significant producer of comparable merchandise and directs Commerce to reconsider its selection of a primary surrogate country. Because Commerce relied on its preference to use data from the primary surrogate country as a basis for selecting the challenged surrogate values, see 2nd Remand Results at 13, 19, the court also remands Commerce's surrogate value selections.
The court sustains Commerce's VAT adjustment.
JURISDICTION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
The court has jurisdiction pursuant to § 516A(a)(2)(B)(iii) of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended, 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(a)(2)(B)(iii) (2012),
4
and
The court will uphold an agency determination that is supported by substantial evidence and otherwise in accordance with law. 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(1)(B)(i). The court's review of Commerce's interpretation and implementation of a statutory scheme is guided by
Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.,
DISCUSSION
I. Significant Producer of Comparable Merchandise
A. Legal Framework
An antidumping duty is "the amount by which the normal value exceeds the export price (or the constructed export price) for the merchandise."
Commerce has adopted a four-step approach to selecting a primary surrogate country. Pursuant thereto:
(1) the Office of Policy ("OP") assembles a list of potential surrogate countries that are at a comparable level of economic development to the [non-market economy] country; (2) Commerce identifies countries from the list with producers of comparable merchandise; (3) Commerce determines whether any of the countries which produce comparable merchandise are significant producers of that comparable merchandise; and (4) if more than one country satisfies steps (1)-(3), Commerce will select the country with the best factors data.
Jiaxing Brother Fastener Co., Ltd. v. United States
,
Neither the statute nor Commerce's regulations define "significant producer."
See
19 U.S.C. § 1677b ;
[t]he extent to which a country is a significant producer should not be judged against the [subject non-market economy] country's production level or the comparative production of the five or six countries [that are considered potential surrogate countries]. Instead, a judgement [ sic ] should be made consistent with the characteristics of world production of, and trade in, comparable merchandise (subject to the availability of data on these characteristics). Since these characteristics are specific to the merchandise in question, the standard for "significant producer" will vary from case to case. For example, if ... there are ten large producers and a variety of small producers, "significant producer" could be interpreted to mean one of the top ten. If, in the example above, there is also a middle-size group of producers, then "significant producer" could be interpreted as one of the top ten or middle group. In another case, there may not be adequate data available from major producing countries. In such a case, "significant producer" could mean a country that is a net exporter, even though the selected surrogate country may not be one of the world's top producers.
Policy Bulletin 04.1 at 3. Because the term "significant producer" is otherwise undefined and ambiguous, the court must assess whether Commerce's interpretation of significant producer in this case is based on a permissible construction of the statute.
Chevron
,
B. Commerce's Interpretation of "Significant Producer" in This Proceeding
The 2nd Remand Results reflect Commerce's third effort to justify its determination that Thailand is a significant producer of comparable merchandise. In the Issues and Decision Memorandum, Commerce identified Thailand as a significant producer based on its total activated carbon export quantity. I & D Mem. at 7. The court held that reliance on total exports without evidence that those exports influenced global trade in activated carbon was not a permissible method of interpreting the term "significant producer" or, thus, identifying significant producer countries.
Jacobi (AR7) I
,
In its first remand redetermination, Commerce sought to rely on financial statements from two Thai manufacturers of activated carbon evidencing some domestic production of comparable merchandise and Thailand's net export quantity to conclude that Thailand is a significant producer of comparable merchandise. 1st Remand Results at 21-22. The court rejected Commerce's first basis-domestic production-because it lacked any analysis as to whether-or why-the amounts were significant, thereby reading the word "significant" out of the statute.
Jacobi (AR7) II
,
In its second remand redetermination, Commerce explained that it does not measure the significance of a country's production according to whether that production influences or effects world trade (or is likely to do so). 2nd Remand Results at 5-6. Commerce instead interprets "significant" as meaning "a noticeably or measurably large amount." Id. at 6. As a substitute for production, Commerce again relied on Thailand's total export quantity and net export quantity, as well as Thailand's ranking as the ninth largest global exporter of activated carbon among 24 reporting countries and Thailand's ranking as the largest global exporter of activated carbon among the countries Commerce considers to be at the same level of economic development as China. See id. at 5-8.
C. Parties' Contentions
Jacobi contends that Commerce has adopted an impermissible interpretation of the term "significant" and has failed to point to substantial record evidence that Thailand is a significant producer of the subject merchandise. Jacobi's Opp'n Cmts. at 5-10. Jacobi notes that the court has already rejected Commerce's reliance on Thailand's total export ranking and asserts that Commerce has added nothing new to its analysis. Id. at 8. Jacobi also contends that Commerce's reliance on Thailand's export ranking among the economically comparable countries is contrary to Commerce's internal policy guidance. Id.
CATC likewise contends that Commerce's redetermination "add[s] essentially nothing" to the agency's prior analysis. CATC's Opp'n Cmts. at 5; see also id. at 5-7. CATC further contends that Commerce's interpretation of "significant" is "unreasonably subjective." Id. at 7. According to CATC, Commerce's selection of a primary surrogate country in this proceeding reflects a failure to consider the purpose of the analysis, which is to "find reliable surrogate country data that most accurately represents the purchasing and production situation of [Jacobi]." Id. at 8-9.
The Government and Calgon contend that Commerce has adopted a permissible construction of the term "significant" and its findings are supported by substantial evidence. Def.'s Reply Cmts. at 3-8; Def.-Ints.' Reply Cmts. at 8-11. They each point to
Juancheng Kangtai Chem. Co., Ltd. v. United States
, Slip Op. 17-3,
D. Commerce's Determination is Remanded for Reconsideration
Upon consideration of the agency's second remand redetermination and the briefing to the court, Commerce's finding that Thailand is a significant producer must be remanded. Commerce has effectively divorced the term "significant" from the term "production" and applied its definition of "significant" without the context necessary to ensure that its determination is not arbitrary. Commerce has not supplied the court with a well-reasoned explanation supporting its consideration of total or net exports as a substitute for production. Overall, the agency has failed to interpret or apply the statutory criterion in its entirety and has not supported its determination that Thailand is a significant producer with substantial evidence.
With respect to total exports, Commerce asserted that the statute "does not require [the agency] to seek the largest overall global exporter in order to find significant production; it only requires a reasonable finding that a country's exports are significant." 2nd Remand Results at 6-7 & n.27 (citing 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(4)(B) ). For this to be reasonable, Commerce must explain why exports are a permissible substitute for domestic production and substantiate the significance of a country's exports, taking into account the record before it, including information that fairly detracts from the agency's finding. 8 Commerce did not do so. 9
Commerce characterized Thailand's total export quantity as "noticeably or measurably large." 2nd Remand Results at 35;
see also
id.
at 37. Commerce is within its discretion to adopt that definition of "significant."
See
Juancheng Kangtai
,
Commerce's Policy Bulletin recognizes the contextual nature of the significant producer determination: it prompts the agency to issue a decision "consistent with the characteristics of world production of, and trade in, comparable merchandise."
See
Policy Bulletin 04.1 at 3. The examples that follow direct Commerce to examine significance from the perspective of relative contributions to global production.
See
Commerce noted that Thailand, with 7.8 million kilograms ("kg") of activated carbon exports, ranks ninth on a list of twenty-four global activated carbon exporters (or eighth excluding China). 2nd Remand Results at 6 & n.23 (citation omitted). According to Commerce, Thailand's "export quantity is large compared to other exporters" on the list. See id. at 6, 35. While Thailand's export quantity is larger than the countries ranked tenth to twenty-fourth, as the court previously explained in relation to this same evidence,
[a]lthough Policy Bulletin 04.1 contemplates that in the event there are "ten large producers and a variety of small producers, 'significant producer' could be interpreted to mean one of the top ten," Policy Bulletin 04.1 at 3, Commerce has not established that that is the situation here . In fact, there appears to be no clear delineation between the top ten and remaining exporters; rather, the top five exporters (China, India, United States, the Philippines, and Indonesia) collectively account for more than 90 [percent] of global exports.... Thereafter, listed countries contribute relatively little to global exports.
Jacobi (AR7) I
,
Commerce also relied on Thailand's ranking as the largest exporter among the countries that it considered to be at the same level of economic development as China.
See
2nd Remand Results at 6. Separately, however, Commerce acknowledged its policy of
not
determining significance relative to the comparative production of the potential surrogate countries.
See
With respect to net exports, Commerce asserted that "[a] country's status as a net exporter supports a finding of significant production because, as noted above, we interpret 'significant' to mean a noticeably or measurably large amount." Id. at 7. Precisely why Commerce considers this to be the case here is unclear. While Commerce has defined "significant" as "noticeably or measurably large," Commerce has not explained why having net exports signifies significant production. Commerce further asserted that "when a country is a net exporter, the assumption is that it produces more than it imports and consumes," id. ; however, the extent to which this is relevant to finding significant production depends, in part, on the amount of domestic consumption. Here, Commerce has failed to identify record evidence of Thailand's domestic consumption, if there is any. The pertinent question then, is whether significant production may reasonably be inferred from Thailand's net export quantity for the relevant period, which was 1,172,897 kg. See id. at 7 & n.31 (citation omitted).
To that end, Commerce asserted that record evidence enabled a comparison of the net exports of Thailand, the Philippines, and Indonesia.
Id.
at 7. Commerce noted that Thailand, the Philippines, and Indonesia had net export quantities of 1,172,897 kg, 60,662,341 kg, and 11,112,825 kg, respectively.
Id.
at 7-8. But without actually analyzing the information, Commerce simply asserted that Policy Bulletin 04.1 provides that being "a net exporter
satisfies
the statutory requirement," and declared all three countries to be significant producers without addressing the disparities between their net export quantities.
Id.
at 8 (emphasis added). In fact, the Policy Bulletin states that although " 'significant producer'
could
mean a country that is a net exporter," Commerce should avoid "fixed standards" in favor of case-specific assessments dependent upon the available data, indicating that an analysis of this data is required. Policy Bulletin 04.1 at 3 (emphasis added).
10
The court has previously rejected Commerce's conclusory
reliance on net exports
per se
and is compelled to do so again here.
Jacobi (AR7) II
,
Commerce has now had three opportunities to justify its selection of Thailand as the primary surrogate country and each time has failed to provide substantial evidence supporting its determination that Thailand is a significant producer of comparable merchandise. In the 2nd Remand Results, Commerce circled back to some of the same reasoning the court previously rejected without addressing any of the concerns identified by the court. Moreover, Commerce's errant reasoning repeatedly ignores its own statements of practice. While Commerce is not bound by those statements of practice, it must explain its departures and has seemed unable. Therefore, the court finds that the record does not support the selection of Thailand as a significant producer. On remand, Commerce must identify a surrogate country, whether from its list of countries at the same level of economic development as the PRC or another country at a comparable level of economic development not on the list, which meets the statutory criteria and is supported by substantial evidence. Because Commerce justified its selection of surrogate values for carbonized material and financial ratios substantially on the basis that they are from the primary surrogate country, see 2nd Remand Results at 13, 19, Commerce must revisit these surrogate values on remand.
II. Value-Added Tax
A. The Application of Section 1677a(c)(2)(B) to Nonmarket Economies
When calculating export price and constructed export price, Commerce may deduct "the amount, if included in such price, of any export tax, duty, or other charge imposed by the exporting country on the exportation of the subject merchandise to the United States, other than an export tax, duty, or other charge described in section 1677(6)(C) of this title."
12
19 U.S.C. § 1677a(c)(2)(B). Such price adjustments must be "reasonably attributable to the subject merchandise."
Prior to 2012, Commerce did not apply 19 U.S.C. § 1677a(c)(2)(B) in proceedings involving imports from nonmarket economy ("NME") countries. Commerce reasoned that "pervasive government intervention in NMEs precluded proper valuation of taxes paid by NME respondents to NME governments."
Methodological Change for Implementation of Section 772(c)(2)(B) of the Tariff Act of 1930, as Amended, In Certain Non-Market Economy Antidumping Proceedings
,
governed by a presumption of widespread intervention and influence in the economic activities of enterprises[ and a]n export tax charged for one purpose may be offset by government transfers provided for another purpose.... To make a deduction for export taxes imposed by a NME government would unreasonably isolate one part of the web of transactions between government and producer.
As the countries that Commerce considered to be nonmarket economies evolved, so did Commerce's practices. In 2002, Commerce revoked Russia's status as a NME country.
See
Silicon Metal From the Russian Federation
,
In 2012, Commerce concluded that it could now identify and measure certain taxes paid by Chinese producers to the Chinese government and announced that, henceforth, it would consider whether the PRC "has imposed an export tax, duty, or other charge upon export of the subject merchandise during the period of investigation or the period of review," including, for example, "an export tax or VAT that is not fully refunded upon exportation."
B. Commerce's Application of the Statute to Chinese VAT
Pursuant to the
Methodological Change
, for the
Final Results
, Commerce reduced Jacobi's constructed export price by an amount it described as "irrecoverable VAT." I & D Mem. at 16-18. According to Commerce, irrecoverable VAT constituted an "export tax, duty, or other charge" because it represented the amount of VAT Jacobi paid on inputs and raw materials used in the production of activated carbon ("input VAT") that became nonrefundable when those inputs and raw materials were consumed in the production of exported subject merchandise.
In
Jacobi (AR7) I
, the court found that section 1677a(c)(2)(B) was ambiguous.
In its first remand redetermination, Commerce continued to characterize its adjustment as accounting for irrecoverable VAT (i.e., unrefunded input VAT). See 1st Remand Results at 25-27. As the basis for its adjustment, however, Commerce pointed to the 17 percent output VAT rate applicable to Jacobi's foreign and domestic sales and found that it was, thus, included in Jacobi's U.S. price. Id. at 27.
The court again remanded the adjustment, this time because Commerce's revised explanation introduced an inconsistency between the calculation methodology (based on output VAT) and the theory underlying the adjustment (unrefunded input VAT).
Jacobi (AR7) II
,
[t]o the extent that Commerce continues to justify the adjustment as accounting for irrecoverable VAT defined as unrefunded input VAT , Commerce must address record evidence demonstrating that Jacobi, in fact, recovers the input VAT it incurs by the offset it takes before remitting the output VAT it collects....
On the other hand, if Commerce asserts that the adjustment is based on an export tax due to Jacobi's collection of output VAT, Commerce must (a) address the record evidence regarding Jacobi's offset for input VAT paid on inputs taken against the output VAT collected, and (b) explain why the VAT adjustment is properly made on the basis of an estimated customs value instead of the FOB value on which the PRC assesses it.
In a subsequent order, the court instructed Commerce to include in its redetermination consideration of
Aristocraft of Am., LLC v. United States
, 42 CIT ----,
In its second remand redetermination in this action, Commerce changed the basis for its adjustment from irrecoverable VAT (i.e. unrefunded input VAT) to the 17 percent output VAT imposed on foreign and domestic activated carbon sales. 2nd Remand Results at 22, 25-26. Commerce supported its revised explanation by way of reference to a more recent iteration of Chinese VAT law the agency had placed on the record of the second remand proceeding.
Pursuant to that law, companies that produce exported goods that are ineligible for an export VAT rebate do not incur a reduction in the input VAT amount credited against the output VAT. Id. at 25-26. Export sales of such goods are treated as domestic sales and are, thus, subject to the collection of output VAT. Id. at 25 & n.106 (citing 2012 VAT Notice, Art. 7.2(1) ). In contrast, companies that produce exported goods that are eligibl e for a VAT rebate incur "a reduction in or offset to the input VAT that can be credited against output VAT" when the company calculates its net VAT payable amount. Id. at 23-24; see also 2012 VAT Notice, Art. 5.1(1). Export sales of such products are not subject to output VAT; instead, these companies incur a reduction in the input VAT amount they may credit against the output VAT collected solely on domestic sales. See 2nd Remand Results at 25. That reduction in the input VAT credit represents "irrecoverable VAT." See id. at 23-24.
In accordance with the foregoing description of Chinese VAT law, Commerce explained that activated carbon is one of the products that is ineligible for an export rebate. Consequently, Commerce found that producers of activated carbon do not incur a reduction in the amount of input VAT creditable against output VAT. Id. at 26 & n.112 (citation omitted). Instead, export sales of activated carbon are treated in the same manner as domestic sales and are subject to the collection of output VAT. Id. at 25-26 & n.114 (citation omitted). Commerce concluded that it previously erred in adjusting Jacobi's constructed export price by an amount purportedly representing irrecoverable VAT. Id. Commerce nevertheless retained the downward adjustment to Jacobi's U.S. price to account for the 17 percent output VAT, which the agency concluded represented an "export tax, duty, or other charge imposed by the exporting country on the exportation of the subject merchandise to the United States" pursuant to section 1677a(c)(2)(B). Id. at 26. Commerce explained that deducting the output VAT from export price ensured the calculation of a tax-neutral dumping margin because normal value in a nonmarket economy proceeding is based on the factors of production, which are VAT-exclusive. Id. at 25 & n.108.
Commerce further noted that certain questions raised by the
Aristocraft
court concerning the calculation of irrecoverable VAT were now irrelevant to Commerce's adjustment in this case.
Id.
at 26-28. Additionally, in response to this court's instruction that any assessment based on output VAT should include consideration of record evidence regarding Jacobi's ability to offset the output VAT with input VAT,
see
Jacobi (AR7) II
,
Commerce calculated the VAT adjustment pursuant to the following formula set forth in Chinese law:
output VAT = FOB * exchange rate / (1 + legal VAT rate) * legal VAT rate.
Commerce further explained that because Jacobi's sales of subject merchandise are subject to output VAT, Jacobi's U.S. price "necessarily include[s]" that amount.
C. Commerce's Authority to Deduct Output VAT from U.S. Price
Jacobi contends that "Commerce's revised reasoning still fails to satisfy the statutory requirement for an adjustment" pursuant to section 1677a(c)(2)(B). Jacobi's Opp'n Cmts. at 23. Jacobi does not, however, develop any particular argument that output VAT does not fulfill the statutory criteria of an "export tax, duty, or other charge imposed by the exporting country on the exportation of the subject merchandise to the United States." Nevertheless, the court recognizes that since it issued
Jacobi AR7 I
, two opinions from the court have called into question Commerce's legal authority to adjust export price or constructed export price to account for VAT (whether irrecoverable or not) pursuant to 19 U.S.C. § 1677a(c)(2)(B).
See
Qingdao Qihang Tyre Co., Ltd. v. United States
, 42 CIT ----, ---- - ----,
In
Qingdao
and
China Manufacturers
, the court, upon reviewing the statute in its current form and as enacted prior to the adoption of the Uruguay Round Agreements Act ("URAA"),
16
concluded, pursuant to
Chevron
prong one, that section 1677a(c)(2)(B) is unambiguous and does not permit Commerce to adjust export price or constructed export price for VAT imposed on export sales indirectly through an input VAT that becomes irrecoverable or, by extension, directly through an output VAT.
Qingdao
,
Previously, when considering Commerce's irrecoverable VAT theory for the adjustment, this court held that "the catchall phrase 'other charge' captures any financial obligation
provided
it is 'imposed by the exporting country on the exportation of the subject merchandise,' regardless of whether the imposing country explicitly labels the charge as one pertaining to exports."
Jacobi (AR 7) I
,
Upon Commerce's further consideration of the record and recognition that, with regard to activated carbon, China simply imposes an output VAT on domestic
and export
sales, the issue is now whether Commerce may apply the statute, 19 U.S.C. § 1677a(c)(2)(B), to a VAT that is equally applicable to domestic and export sales. This court determines that section 1677a(c)(2)(B)'s reference to "export tax[es], dut[ies], or other charge[s] imposed by the exporting country on the exportation of the subject merchandise" is
ambiguous as to whether the statute applies to such assessments imposed
solely
upon export sales or assessments imposed upon sales
at the time of export
, regardless of whether the assessment is also applied to domestic sales.
But cf.
Qingdao
,
The notion that the imposition of a tax, duty or other charge that is generally applicable to both domestic and export sales does not alone preclude it from providing the basis for an adjustment pursuant to section 1677a(c)(2)(B) finds support in the U.S. Supreme Court's Export Clause jurisprudence. The Export Clause provides: "No Tax or Duty shall be laid on Articles exported from any State." U.S. Const., Art. 1, § 9, cl. 5. In
United States v. International Business Machines Corp
. ("
IBM
"), the Court held that the Export Clause bars the imposition of a generally applicable federal tax on goods in export transit, even if the tax is nondiscriminatory and equally applicable to non-export transactions.
The court now turns to consideration of whether Commerce's interpretation of section 1677a(c)(2)(B) was reasonable when applied to China's output VAT in this case. Here, Commerce interpreted section 1677a(c)(2)(B) to permit a reduction to EP/CEP in order to achieve a tax neutral comparison between EP/CEP and normal value, see 2nd Remand Results at 25 & n.108, and such an interpretation, as discussed more fully below, was reasonable.
As an initial matter, it is important to bear in mind that here, normal value is not based on home-market (i.e., domestic) sales prices, but is based on the respondent's factors of production and corresponding surrogate values, which are determined on a tax-exclusive basis. 17 In such a case, the principle that dumping margin calculations should be tax-neutral supports Commerce's adjustment. 18
The Federal Circuit recognized more than two decades ago:
Buried in the language of statute and case law, and obscured by the fog of litigation, is a simple policy issue: whether Congress, in the Tariff Act of 1930 (the Act), precluded Commerce from determining dumping margins in a tax-neutral fashion.
Federal-Mogul Corp. v. United States
,
First, the pre-URAA version of the statute clearly permitted Commerce to make tax-neutral dumping calculations. Whether it was through adjustments to foreign market value or purchase price/exporter's sales price,
Federal-Mogul
confirms that "one thing is clear[:] ... in administering the Act, [Commerce] over the years has pursued a policy of attempting to make the tax adjustment called for by the Act tax-neutral."
Second, the suggestion that Congress, by providing for adjustments to normal value or EP/CEP, is legislating adjustments to increase or decrease the margin of dumping is unsupported.
But cf., e.g.
,
Qingdao
,
statute that accounted for indirect taxes through an upward adjustment to export price, which change "is intended to ensure that dumping margins will be tax-neutral"). Typically, these adjustments lead to ex-factory prices, packed in the same manner, and on the same tax basis. See SAA at 827.
Third, as discussed above, there is no indication that before 2012, Commerce (or Congress) considered section 1677a to be inapplicable in NME cases.
See
Methodological Change
,
Finally, returning to the "policy issue" identified in Federal-Mogul , adjusting EP/CEP for VAT imposed on export sales allows Commerce to calculate a tax-neutral dumping margin when normal value is calculated exclusive of VAT. In this case, as discussed in more detail below, the constructed export price reported by Jacobi includes 17 percent output VAT imposed by the Chinese government, whereas the normal value, to which it is to be compared, is determined using surrogate values that are tax-exclusive. See 2nd Remand Results at 25 & n.108. To interpret section 1677a(c)(2)(B) as unambiguously barring Commerce from adjusting EP/CEP for these taxes when comparing those prices to a tax-exclusive normal value would be to require that it understate the margin of dumping. The court finds no support for such a requirement in the language of the statute. Thus, Commerce's conclusion that China's output VAT is an "export tax, duty, or other charge imposed by the exporting country on the exportation of the subject merchandise" is a permissible interpretation of section 1677a(c)(2)(B), 2nd Remand Results at 26, and the court now turns to Jacobi's arguments that the adjustment is unsupported by substantial evidence.
D. Commerce's Adjustment is Supported by Substantial Evidence
Jacobi contends there is not substantial evidence to support Commerce's determination that Jacobi's U.S. price includes 17 percent output VAT.
See
Jacobi's Opp'n Cmts. at 24-25, 27. According to Jacobi, the existence of a "legal requirement" to collect output VAT on its U.S. sales is not evidence that it includes an amount for output VAT in its sales prices to the United States.
The Government contends that Jacobi's reporting that its U.S. sales were subject to the collection of 17 percent output VAT represents substantial evidence that output VAT was included in its U.S. prices. Def.'s Reply Cmts. at 22. The Government further contends that Commerce properly discounted the relevance of Jacobi's ability to offset input VAT from output VAT and its calculation of a net VAT payable amount because Commerce's adjustment to Jacobi's constructed export prices is not intended to account for the VAT amount Jacobi paid to the Chinese government, but rather, the amount of VAT included in U.S. price.
Calgon contends that because "the cost of output VAT falls on the buyer of the good, not on the [seller]," it "is necessarily included in Jacobi's price." Def.-Ints.' Reply Cmts. at 22 (quoting 2nd Remand Results at 23). Calgon further contends that Commerce adequately addressed the court's questions regarding the relationship between input VAT and output VAT and the relevance of the
Aristocraft
opinion.
The court sustains Commerce's VAT adjustment. The absence of a line item for output VAT on Jacobi's sales documents is not dispositive and the record supports Commerce's determination that Jacobi's export prices include output VAT.
See
Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. United States,
Here, Jacobi concedes that its U.S. sales were subject to the collection of 17 percent output VAT pursuant to the 2012 VAT Notice. See Jacobi's Opp'n Cmts. at 26; Jacobi's Suppl. § CQR at 30; 2012 VAT Notice, Art. 7.2(1). Jacobi suggests, however, that it calculates the net VAT payable amount as if it collected output VAT on U.S. sales, but that it does not actually collect output VAT on those sales. See Jacobi's Opp'n Cmts. at 26. In making this claim, Jacobi points to no affirmative evidence demonstrating that the FOB China port value reflected in its sales documents is output VAT-exclusive. See Jacobi's § AQR, Ex. A-16 at ECF p. 13. The record reasonably supports Commerce's conclusion that Jacobi's U.S. prices included output VAT-regardless of whether Jacobi itemized that charge in its sales documents.
Additionally, contrary to Jacobi's arguments, see Jacobi's Opp'n Cmts. at 25, Commerce did not impermissibly base its adjustment on the contemporaneous Chinese law while ignoring evidence of Jacobi's net VAT payment. The statute directs Commerce to make adjustments based on certain amounts included in U.S. price, not amounts remitted to the subject nonmarket economy government. 22 See 19 U.S.C. § 1677a(c)(2)(B). Jacobi also faults Commerce for never requesting a U.S. sales-specific VAT reconciliation. See Jacobi's Opp'n Cmts. at 25. However, as noted, the reconciliation document it submitted appears to include output VAT collected in connection with Jacobi's U.S. sales. See Jacobi's Suppl. § CQR, Ex. SC-58. The lack of a U.S. sales-specific reconciliation does not undermine Commerce's determination.
In sum, Commerce's redetermination on this issue complies with the court's remand instructions set forth in Jacobi (AR7) II and the agency's deduction of output VAT from Jacobi's constructed export price is lawful and supported by substantial evidence.
CONCLUSION AND ORDER
In accordance with the foregoing, it is hereby
ORDERED that Commerce's 2nd Remand Results are remanded for Commerce to reconsider its surrogate country selection as well as the surrogate values for carbonized material and financial ratios, as set forth in Discussion Section I above; it is further
ORDERED that Commerce's 2nd Remand Results are sustained with respect to the agency's VAT adjustment, as set forth in Discussion Section II above; it is further
ORDERED that, in the event Commerce amends the antidumping margin assigned to Jacobi on remand, Commerce reconsider the separate rate assigned to non-mandatory respondents; it is further
ORDERED that Commerce shall file its third remand results on or before June 3, 2019; it is further
ORDERED that the deadlines provided in USCIT Rule 56.2(h) shall govern thereafter; and it is further
ORDERED that any opposition or supportive comments must not exceed 6,000 words.
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
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