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Japan steel groups are seeking reforms to prevent tariff evasion, as China exports soar.

Japan steel groups are seeking reforms to prevent tariff evasion, as China exports soar.

Japanese steel lobby groups have demanded early measures to stop the evasion and avoidance of anti-dumping duties aimed at protecting the domestic industry from unfair imports.

This move coincides with record steel exports by China, the largest producer in the world, which have sparked protectionist reactions around the globe. Since January of last year, almost 40 countries have launched anti-dumping investigations.

The Japan Iron and Steel Federation and other four industry groups have said that swift action is required as countries like China try to avoid antidumping tariffs by routing their exports through a third country or performing minimal processing in order to evade duty.

Japan launched a recent anti-dumping probe into hot-dip-galvanized steel imported from China, South Korea and Taiwan. This follows a similar probe that was started in July into stainless steel cold-rolled sheets and strips with nickel-based, imported from China, Taiwan and Taiwan.

Takanari Yamashita is the managing director of Japan's steel federation. He told reporters that even if antidumping measures were imposed, their effectiveness would be "significantly undermined" if they weren't taken to prevent circumvention.

He said that he was not pursuing protectionism, but rather strengthening the anti-dumping system to ensure fair competition and ensuring fair competition.

According to the Federation, 18 of Group of Twenty nations (G20), have already implemented anti-circumvention measures, leaving Japan and Indonesia as the only two countries without these measures.

If Japan wants to combat circumvention it will have to launch a brand new anti-dumping probe.

Industry groups urge the government, for this reason to separate the existing anti-dumping tariffs from the tax rules under the planned tax reform that will begin the next fiscal period on April 1, 2019.

The group also calls for the hiring of more investigators to conduct trade investigations and improvements in the system. (Reporting and editing by Yuka Obabayashi.

(source: Reuters)