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Micro Economics




                    Notes



                                     Case Study  In Curbing Anti-Dumping, Chinese Companies Sued For
                                               Monopoly in US.
                                        n a closely watched case that could test the reach of U.S. antitrust law, four Chinese
                                        companies face powerful evidence that they colluded to limit production and  fi x
                                     Iprices of vitamin C in the United States. The evidence is so convincing, in fact, that the
                                     defendants have not contested the allegations.

                                     But they still have a potentially solid legal defense: the Chinese Government made them do
                                     it. It’s a position that has been bolstered by the Chinese government itself, which made an

                                     official appearance in the case -- believed to be its first ever in a U.S. court -- to fi le briefs in

                                     support of the defendants. After more than six years of litigation, a Brooklyn federal judge
                                     is expected to decide soon whether the case can be decided without a trial.
                                     The legal theory underpinning the defendants’ argument is known as the foreign sovereign
                                     compulsion doctrine, which protects foreign companies that were compelled by their own
                                     government to break U.S. law. As Chinese companies increasingly become the target of
                                     antitrust lawsuits in the United States, the doctrine is expected to undergo more legal
                                     scrutiny. In addition to the vitamin C case, Chinese companies have raised the sovereign
                                     compulsion defense in two other price-fi xing cases.
                                     The outcomes of those cases are not expected to have an immediate impact on U.S. trade
                                     relations with China, the largest supplier of goods imported into the United States. As
                                     China’s economic power continues to grow, however, the disputes could be a sign of more
                                     trade fi ghts ahead.
                                     Shanker Singham, a partner at Squire, Sanders & Dempsey and the chairman of the
                                     International Roundtable on Trade and Competition Policy, said that a ruling for the
                                     defendants would undermine global competition. “It would be a declaration of war on
                                     the market system where business competition on the merits is the organizing economic
                                     principle,” Singham said.
                                     Pact Limits Export Volumes
                                     Until recently, Chinese companies have been known for low production costs that have
                                     benefited consumers worldwide, and only in the last five years have they been accused of


                                     coordinating production in an effort to raise prices. “The appearance of Chinese cartels that
                                     are hiding behind the state is a disturbing trend,” said John Connor, a professor at Purdue
                                     University specializing in antitrust law enforcement.
                                     Among the documents in the vitamin C case is a 2001 written production and price
                                     agreement among the four Chinese manufacturers, which together controlled around 60
                                     percent of the world’s vitamin C market. The pact explicitly limited each company to a
                                     specific volume for export. According to the plaintiffs, after the agreement was made, spot

                                     prices for vitamin C shot to as high as $7 per kilogram in December 2002 from $2.50 per
                                     kilogram in December 2001.

                                     In an amicus brief  filed in support of the defendants, China’s Ministry of Commerce
                                     argued that the vitamin C manufacturers were compelled by Chinese law to coordinate
                                     their production and pricing. It also argued that a ruling against the manufactures would
                                     “improperly penalize” them for “the sovereign acts of their government and would
                                     adversely affect implementations of China’s trade policy.”
                                                                                                         Contd...






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