POGUE, Chief Judge.
In prior proceedings in this matter, the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ("CAFC") held that when calculating surrogate labor rates for the valuation of goods from a nonmarket economy ("NME"), the Department of Commerce ("Commerce") must use data from countries that are both economically comparable to the NME and significant producers of comparable merchandise. Dorbest Ltd. v. United States, 604 F.3d 1363, 1372-73 (Fed.Cir.2010)("Dorbest IV"). Dorbest IV thus required Commerce to redetermine, on remand, the labor rate applicable here. See Final Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Remand, Dorbest Ltd. v. United States, (Nov. 10, 2010)("Remand Results").
In its remand determination, choosing data from the record, Commerce calculated a labor wage rate by averaging industry-specific earnings and/or wages from three countries—India, Indonesia and Pakistan—that it found to be both economically comparable to China and significant producers of wooden bedroom furniture. Based on these calculations, Commerce identified an average wage rate of 0.23 USD/hour and found that using that average wage rate as a surrogate for the cost of labor in the production of Plaintiff/Respondent Dorbest's merchandise, Dorbest has a de minimis dumping margin. Remand Results at 17, 42.
Plaintiff/Petitioner American Furniture Manufacturers Committee for Legal Trade ("AFMC") now seeks review of Commerce's data choices in that redetermination on remand.
After a brief review of the relevant procedural history, the agency's methodology, and the applicable standard of review, the court will explain why it concludes that, given the record as a whole, the first of Commerce's choices must be remanded but the other three data choices were reasonable and therefore must be sustained.
This matter arises from Commerce's investigation of whether wooden bedroom furniture from China was being dumped in the United States domestic market during the time period between April 1, 2003 and September 30, 2003. Wooden Bedroom Furniture from the People's Republic of China, 68 Fed.Reg. 70,228 (Dep't Commerce Dec. 17, 2003)(Notice of Initiation of Antidumping Investigation). Commerce's final determination in the original investigation was subsequently challenged and remanded three times before it was appealed to the CAFC.
In Dorbest IV, the CAFC invalidated Commerce's wage rate calculation regulation.
After Dorbest IV, Commerce acknowledged that the data on the record was insufficient to comply with the court's remand order and re-opened the administrative record to admit new wage data. Request for Comment Regarding Wage Rate Data, A-570-890, Remand Redetermination Investigation ("RRI") 4/1/03-9/30/03 (Aug. 11, 2010), Remand Admin. R. Pub. Doc. 1. Commerce also invited interested parties to submit comments and new factual information with regards to the sole issue of labor wage valuation. Id. at 2. AFMC and Dorbest each submitted comments and wage rate data for Commerce's consideration.
Selecting from the record data, Commerce, in its remand determination, specified five steps for calculating labor wage rates ("the 5-step methodology").
Second, Commerce proceeded to identify which of the 24 listed countries had exports of comparable merchandise between 2001 and 2003. Remand Results at 12. At this step, Commerce identified 13 countries from the list that were both economically comparable to China and significant producers of comparable merchandise.
Third, Commerce identified which of the 13 countries reported wage data between 1997 and 2002. Remand Results at 13. In doing so, Commerce relied on the International Labor Organization ("ILO") wage data from the base year and five years prior. See AFMC Br. at 8. After applying this step, six countries remained.
Commerce then added a fourth step to its methodology: It identified which countries reported an industry-specific classification within the ILO wage rate data. Remand Results at 13-14. In doing so, Commerce looked to data that was reported according to the International Standard Industrial Classification of all Economic Activities ("ISIC") code.
Finally, Commerce calculated an average wage rate for these three countries by using wage rate data from a three-digit subclassification level, when that sub-classification was available.
The court will sustain a Commerce redetermination on remand "if it complies with the court's remand order, is supported by substantial evidence on the record, and is otherwise in accordance with law." Jinan Yipin Corp. v. United States, ___ CIT ___, 637 F.Supp.2d 1183, 1185 (2009)(citing 19 U.S.C. § 1516a (b)(1)(B)(i)).
An agency determination is supported by substantial evidence when the record upon which it is based contains such "relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion." Consol. Edison Co. v. N.L.R.B., 305 U.S. 197, 229, 59 S.Ct. 206, 83 L.Ed. 126 (1938). In making this evaluation of the record, the court assesses whether the agency's data choices are reasonable considering the record as a whole. See Nippon Steel Corp. v. United States, 458 F.3d 1345, 1351 (Fed.Cir. 2006). At a minimum, in making its data choices, the agency must explain the standards it applied and make a rational connection between the standards and the conclusion. See Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. United States, 750 F.2d 927, 933 (Fed.Cir.1984). A rational connection is a connection that is supported by justification or evidence. See Bowman Transp., Inc. v. Arkansas-Best Freight Sys., Inc., 419 U.S. 281, 285, 95 S.Ct. 438, 42 L.Ed.2d 447 (1975) (explaining that, even under the narrower arbitrary and capricious standard of review, the agency must examine the relevant data and articulate a satisfactory explanation for its action, including a "rational connection between the facts found and the choice made" (quoting Burlington Truck Lines, Inc. v. United States, 371 U.S. 156, 168, 83 S.Ct. 239, 9 L.Ed.2d 207 (1962))).
The first issue before the court is Commerce's initial selection of a pair of "bookend" countries to establish a range of GNI with which to identify a list of countries that qualify as economically comparable to China.
The high-income "bookend" country selected from the list in Commerce's original surrogate country memorandum was the Philippines, with a GNI of 1,020, and the low-income bookend country was Pakistan with a GNI of 410.
AFMC asserts that the CAFC clearly intended Commerce to use countries with reported GNI's both above and below that of China in order to capture an absolute range of economically comparable countries.
Commerce contends that it was instructed merely to base its wage value on countries that are economically comparable to China and that neither the statute nor Dorbest IV define a set range of GNI to be used when determining economic comparability. Remand Results at 32. Commerce notes that the countries on the surrogate country memo were already determined to be economically comparable to China and that the memo provided a sufficient number of economically comparable countries to act as a starting point. Remand Results at 33.
Commerce's explanation is insufficient. While Commerce has discretion to determine the countries which will act as bookends for its selection, it has not provided a reasoned explanation of its "bookend" choices. In particular, Commerce's remand decision overlooks the explicit statement in the surrogate country memo that the proposed list is non-exhaustive, allowing for the possibility of introducing a more balanced range of countries from which to draw labor wage rate data. Surrogate country memo at 1.
Here, both of the two bookend countries have GNIs that fall below China's, resulting in a range of corresponding wage rates that will likely fall below China's wage rates. Given the high correlation between per capita GNI and wage rates, a correlation that Commerce acknowledges, Commerce's selection appears arbitrarily biased towards the low end of per capita GNI. See Remand Results at 35-36 (acknowledging established global relationship between wages and GNI); also Dorbest II, 547 F.Supp.2d at 1327. Certainly Commerce does not have to achieve mathematical perfection in its choice of countries to act as bookends for its initial selection, but Commerce must explain why it selected two countries with GNIs that are lower than China's to use as bookends, and Commerce's explanation must rest "upon principles that are rational, neutral, and in accord with the agency's proper understanding of its authority." FCC v. Fox Tel. Stations, Inc., ___ U.S. ___, 129 S.Ct. 1800, 1823, 173 L.Ed.2d 738 (Kennedy, concurring) (2009); see, e.g., Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co., 750 F.2d at 933. Without such an explanation, Commerce's determination is arbitrary because it "fail[s] to consider an important aspect of the problem," and is therefore unreasonable. SKF USA v. United States, 2011 WL 73179, *6 (Fed.Cir.Jan.7, 2011)(quoting Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass'n. of U.S., Inc. v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 463 U.S. 29, 43, 103 S.Ct. 2856, 77 L.Ed.2d 443(1983)).
Commerce asserts that the CAFC's explicit directive to rely on data from countries that are economically comparable to China will "necessarily result in a truncated dataset." Remand Results at 33. But this argument misses the point. While the CAFC's opinion has precluded the larger data sets that Commerce used in its invalidated regression-based methodology, that opinion did not hold that Commerce was
Finally, Commerce claims that the range of economically comparable countries is not unfair—just because that range is not centered around China's GNI—and points out that there is no statutory requirement that Commerce select the "most comparable country." Remand Results at 33-34. AFMC responds that at a minimum, Commerce should achieve "substantial balance" in its data set by selecting bookend countries that are roughly equally above and below China's per capita GNI.
Fujian Lianfu Forestry is distinguishable, however, because it involved the choice of a single country to act as a primary surrogate country. See Fujian Lianfu Forestry, 638 F.Supp.2d at 1347. Here, Commerce is selecting a range of countries. Moreover, there is no indication here that the methodology applied in Fujian Lianfu Forestry to select a primary surrogate country is similar to the methodology for determining surrogate wage rates. See id. at 1348-49. On the contrary, in the context of wage rate calculation, Commerce has stated that there is a high correlation between wage rates and GNI. Remand Results at 35-36. Given this statement, Commerce has not explained, beyond conclusory reasoning, how relying on broader GNI rankings of countries could produce an "illusion of precision." See Amanda Foods (Vietnam), Ltd. v. United States, 647 F.Supp.2d 1368, 1377 (CIT 2009)(holding that Commerce must provide more than conclusory reasoning for treating all countries on surrogate country memorandum as identical).
For the above reasons, the court remands this issue to Commerce so that it may 1) explain why it is justified in selecting this particular pair of countries to act as bookends for the selection process, in light of their low GNIs and the high correlation between GNI and wage rates, or 2) otherwise reconsider its determination in accordance with this opinion.
AFMC next contends that Commerce's reliance on 2002 GNI data and 2002 ILO wage data does not constitute use of the "best available data" under 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(1). AFMC Br. at 11.
AFMC contends that once an agency has reopened the record, it must consider all evidence properly before it and therefore, the best available information currently consists of the 2003 ILO wage data. AFMC Br. at 16. AFMC's argument, however, disregards the procedural posture of this case. Remand proceedings do not grant the parties the right to a new antidumping investigation from the current date. See, e.g., 2 Am.Jur.2d Administrative Law § 575. Rather, in remand proceedings, an administrative agency must modify its original determination in accordance with the remand order. See id.
Here Commerce reopened the record to admit new data because it needed a new type of data to comply with our remand order; that order, however, did not require data from a different time period. See Request for Comment Regarding Wage Rate Data, A-570-890, RRI 4/1/03-9/30/03 (Aug. 11, 2010), Remand Admin. R. Pub. Doc. 1 at 2. The error in Commerce's original determination arose not from the time period for which the ILO wage data were selected, but rather from the methodology applied to select the data.
Asserting that Commerce's decision is not in accord with the statute, AFMC incorrectly cites Port of Seattle v. Fed. Energy Regulatory Comm'n, 499 F.3d 1016, 1035 (9th Cir.2007). AFMC's reliance misses the point. In Port of Seattle, the Ninth Circuit reviewed a decision made by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission ("FERC") which disregarded evidence added to the record after a preliminary evidentiary proceeding but before FERC rendered its final decision. Port of Seattle, 499 F.3d at 1025. Port of Seattle does not
In the alternative, AFMC contends that the decision to use only data available during the time of the original investigation is arbitrary and not supported by substantial evidence. AFMC Br. at 17. AFMC makes three arguments in support of this assertion.
First, AFMC contests Commerce's finding that the interests of administrative finality and efficiency overcome an interest in conducting accurate fact finding and that allowing later-discovered evidence sets an undesirable precedent. AFMC Br. at 17-18. AFMC argues that it is not attempting to circumvent the finality of Commerce's determination with new evidence and that Commerce has strayed from its own precedent in choosing not to use the updated data.
The case AFMC relies on to make this argument, Shakeproof Assembly Components Div. Of Illinois Tool Works, Inc. v. United States, 30 CIT 1173, 2006 WL 2457626 (Aug. 25, 2006), does not support AFMC's claim. The court in Shakeproof upheld Commerce's decision to reject evidence that was not contemporaneous with the period of investigation and noted in dicta that Commerce has traditionally used "valuation information contemporaneous with a period of investigation or review." Shakeproof, 30 CIT at 1177. Here the data used by Commerce is contemporaneous with the period of investigation in that it represents the data available at the time of the original investigation. Thus Shakeproof is not contrary authority.
Second, AFMC asserts that 2003 ILO wage data was available at the time of the original investigation because this court acknowledged in Dorbest I that the 2004 download, which happened to include 2003 data, was materially the same as the data available during the original investigation. AFMC mis-states our finding in Dorbest I. In Dorbest I, this court discussed the availability of 2002 ILO wage data shortly after the original investigation was completed and found that the 2004 download of that data was materially the same. Dorbest I, 462 F.Supp.2d at 1299. The availability of the 2003 ILO wage rate data during the original investigation was not before us in Dorbest I and therefore AFMC may not rely on Dorbest I to establish the existence of the 2003 ILO wage data and its concomitant availability during the original investigation.
Finally, AFMC asserts that Commerce "cherry picked" from the data, using both 2002 and 2003 ILO wage data in its calculations. AFMC Br. at 20. Commerce acknowledged in the remand results that it needed to extract 2002 ILO wage data that had not been retained at the time of the original investigation. In the remand results, Commerce stated that it relied on "a current download of 2001-2003 export data" to determine which countries were significant producers of comparable merchandise. Remand Results at 22. AFMC asserts that there is no reasonable basis for Commerce to conclude that the 2003 ILO wage data was not available during the time of the investigation while at the
The AFMC next contends that Commerce's calculations are unsupported by substantial evidence because they rely in part on Indian wage data that appear to exclude workers making more than Rs.1600 per month, and thus appears "capped" or limited to wages under that amount. AFMC Br. at 37. We disagree.
In support of its claim, AFMC cites the Annual Survey of Industries (ASI), which can be read to indicate that a "cap" limits the Indian wage data to the bottom 2% of wage earners. Petitioners' Comments Concerning Draft Results of Redetermination Pursuant to Remand in Dorbest Limited v. United States, A-570-890, RRI 4/1/03-9/30/03 (Oct. 22, 2010), Remand Admin. R. Pub. Doc. 13 at 35-37. Commerce, however, declines to use this information because it was not made available until 2006. Remand Results at 40. As discussed supra, Commerce's decision to exclude data that would not have been available at the time of the original investigation is reasonable. See Dorbest I, 462 F.Supp.2d at 1299.
In addition, Commerce further supports its stance by explaining that the ASI data do not represent industry-specific 2002 wages.
Finally, AFMC challenges Commerce's data choices at the fourth and fifth steps of the wage rate calculation, asserting that Commerce's choices arbitrarily reduced the number of countries from which
AFMC argues that the use of industry-specific data from ISIC Revision 2 is arbitrary and capricious because of Commerce's stated preference for a large "basket" of countries from which to choose. AFMC claims that requiring industry-specific wage data unnecessarily reduces the number of available countries from which to draw data when country-wide wage data is available from more countries. AFMC Br. at 32.
Commerce, in response, asserts correctly that the governing statute is silent on this issue, leaving the determination to Commerce's reasonable discretion. See 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(1). Commerce explains that using industry-specific data is preferable because it comports with Commerce's long-standing practice of valuing the most specific data for production factors, and, at the very least, such data is more specific to the subject merchandise than country-wide data. Remand Results at 28-29.
While Commerce acknowledges AFMC's concerns, it notes, and we agree, that AFMC has failed to provide evidence to show that industry-specific data are unsuitable for calculating wage rates. Remand Results at 28. Furthermore, AFMC's argument misses the point. Our inquiry here is not whether Commerce used a certain number of countries in its calculations. Rather it is whether Commerce reasonably adhered to the remand order and the statutory requirements set forth in 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(4), and whether Commerce's determination is supported by a reasonable reading of the record evidence as a whole.
Nonetheless, with regards to whether Commerce used the best available information from the record, Commerce states that it believes industry-specific data will yield the most accurate results, and explains that it used ISIC Revision 2 because it contains a two-digit sub-classification of industry-specific wages which Commerce feels to be most relevant to the production of wooden furniture. Remand Results at 15 ("[Commerce] identified the two-digit series most specific to wooden bedroom furniture as Sub-Classification 33", which is described as "Manufacture of Wood and Wood Products, Including Furniture"). Commerce also stated that it chose to use ISIC Revision 2 rather than the updated Revision 3 because Revision 2 contained the specific sub-classification which was more specific to, and thus a better match for, the subject merchandise.
For the reasons given above, Commerce's decision to use industry-specific data is reasonable and in compliance with the statutory requirements set forth in 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(4).
Accordingly, Commerce's initial selection of two "bookend" countries—the
It is SO ORDERED.