Viet Nam’s Ministry of Industry and Trade (MoIT) has decided to maintain safeguard measures for steel billets and steel bars imported from a number of countries and territories including China, the US, Canada, Germany, France, Japan and the Republic of Korea.
A worker stands atop long steel bars. The Ministry of Industry and Trade has decided to keep tariffs in place to protect the domestic steel industry. — Photo vca.gov.vn
The decision was made after the mid-term review. The investigating unit determined that if the safeguards are not continued, the domestic industry would find it difficult to compete with imported goods.
According to the MoIT, maintaining tariffs on imported steel is necessary to ensure the effectiveness of the measures and to give local industry more time to restore production.
Products subject to duty have the HS codes 7207.11.00; 7207.19.00; 7207.20.29; 7207.20.99; 7224.90.00; 7213.10.10; 7213.10.90; 7213.91.20; 7214.20.31; 7214.20.41; 7227.90.00; 7228.30.10 and 9811.00.00.
The rate imposed on long steel products will be 12.4 per cent from March 22, 2018 to March 21, 2019 and will be reduced to 10.9 per cent in the following year.
Tariffs on steel billets will be 19.3 per cent and 17.3 per cent over the same periods.
The tax rate for both steel products will decrease gradually to zero per cent by March 22, 2020 if the ministry does not renew the safeguards.
In July 2016, the MoIT decided to impose tariffs on imported steel billets and steel bars.
Developing countries like India, Thailand and some Latin American countries, and under-developed ones in Africa that account for less than 3 per cent of Viet Nam’s total steel imports are exempt from the tariff.
On March 26, the MoIT conducted a mid-term review of safeguard measures for these products. — VNS