97-3355. Tapered Roller Bearings and Parts Thereof, Finished and Unfinished, From the People's Republic of China; Final Results and Partial Termination of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 28 (Tuesday, February 11, 1997)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 6173-6188]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-3355]
    
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
    [A-570-601]
    
    
    Tapered Roller Bearings and Parts Thereof, Finished and 
    Unfinished, From the People's Republic of China; Final Results and 
    Partial Termination of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review
    
    AGENCY: Import Administration, International Trade Administration, 
    Department of Commerce.
    
    ACTION: Notice of final results and partial termination of antidumping 
    duty administrative review on tapered roller bearings and parts 
    thereof, finished and unfinished, from the People's Republic of China.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: On August 5, 1996, the Department of Commerce (the Department) 
    published the preliminary results of its administrative review of the 
    antidumping duty order on tapered roller bearings (TRBs) and parts 
    thereof, finished and unfinished, from the People's Republic of China 
    (PRC). The period of review (POR) is June 1, 1994, through May 31, 
    1995.
        Based on our analysis of comments received, we have made changes to 
    the margin calculations, including corrections of certain clerical 
    errors. Therefore, the final results differ from the preliminary 
    results. The final weighted-average dumping margins are listed below in 
    the section entitled ``Final Results of Review.''
        We have determined that sales have been made below normal value 
    (NV) during the POR. Accordingly, we will instruct the U.S. Customs 
    Service to assess antidumping duties based on the difference between 
    export price (EP) or constructed export price (CEP) and NV.
        We have terminated this review with respect to Shanghai General 
    Bearing Company (Shanghai) based on our revocation of the company from 
    this order in the final results of the 1993-94 review. See Tapered 
    Roller Bearings and Parts Thereof, Finished and Unfinished, from the 
    PRC (to be published in Vol. 62 of the Federal Register in February 
    1997) (TRBs VII).
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: February 11, 1997.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Charles Riggle, Andrea Chu, Kristie 
    Strecker, or Kris Campbell, Import Administration, International Trade 
    Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce, 14th Street and 
    Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington DC 20230; telephone (202) 482-
    4733.
    
    APPLICABLE STATUTE AND REGULATIONS: Unless otherwise indicated, all 
    citations to the statute and to the Department's regulations are 
    references to the provisions effective January 1, 1995, the effective 
    date of the amendments made to the Tariff Act of 1930 (the Act) by the 
    Uruguay Round Agreements Act (URAA).
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Background
    
        On August 5, 1996, we published in the Federal Register the 
    preliminary results of administrative review of the antidumping duty 
    order on TRBs from the PRC. See Tapered Roller Bearings and Parts 
    Thereof, Finished and Unfinished, From the People's Republic of China; 
    Preliminary Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review, 61 FR 
    40610 (August 5, 1996) (Preliminary Results). We gave interested 
    parties an opportunity to comment on our preliminary results and held a 
    public hearing on September 25, 1996. The following parties submitted 
    comments: The Timken Company (Petitioner); Guizhou Machinery Import and 
    Export Corporation (Guizhou Machinery), Jilin Province Machinery Import 
    and Export Corporation (Jilin), Liaoning MEC Group Company Limited 
    (Liaoning), Luoyang Bearing Corporation (Luoyang), Shandong Machinery 
    and Equipment Import & Export Group Corporation (Shandong), Tianshui 
    Hailin Bearing Factory (Tianshui), China National Machinery Import and 
    Export Corporation (CMC), China National Automotive Industry Import & 
    Export Guizhou Corporation (Guizhou Automotive), Wanxiang Group 
    Corporation (Wanxiang), Xiangfan Machinery Foreign Trade Corporation 
    Hubei China (Xiangfan), Zhejiang Machinery Import & Export Corporation 
    (Zhejiang), and Wafangdian Bearing Industry Corporation (Wafangdian) 
    (collectively referred to as Guizhou Machinery et al.); Premier Bearing 
    and Equipment Company (Premier); Great Wall Industry Corporation (Great 
    Wall); East Sea Bearing Company Limited/Peer Bearing Company (East 
    Sea); Transcom, Incorporated (Transcom); and L&S Bearing Company/LSB 
    Industries (L&S).
        We have conducted this administrative review in accordance with 
    section 751(a)(1) of the Act and 19 CFR 353.22.
    
    Scope of Reviews
    
        Imports covered by these reviews are shipments of TRBs and parts 
    thereof, finished and unfinished, from the PRC. This merchandise is 
    classifiable under the Harmonized Tariff Schedule (HTS) item numbers 
    8482.20.00, 8482.91.00.60, 8482.99.30, 8483.20.40, 8483.20.80, 
    8483.30.80, 8483.90.20, 8483.90.30 and 8483.90.80. Although the HTS 
    item numbers are provided for convenience and customs purposes, our 
    written description of the scope of this proceeding is dispositive.
    
    Facts Available
    
        In accordance with section 776(a) of the Act, we have determined 
    that the use of adverse Facts Available is appropriate for certain 
    firms, as discussed in the Preliminary Results at 40613-14.
    
    Analysis of Comments Received
    
    1. Separate Rates
    
    Comment 1
        Petitioner states that the Department incorrectly determined that 
    all fourteen PRC companies that participated in this review are 
    entitled to a separate rate. Petitioner requests that the Department 
    review these firms as a single entity.
        Petitioner claims that the Department's finding that a PRC list of 
    products subject to direct government control does not name ``TRBs'' is
    
    [[Page 6174]]
    
    inaccurate because the list does name ``bearings'' (citing ``Temporary 
    Provisions for Administration of Export Commodities''). Petitioner 
    states that the fact that TRBs, as ``bearings,'' appear on this list 
    eliminates a significant reason for the Department's decision to 
    determine separate rates.
        Petitioner adds that, in the preliminary results, the Department 
    misapplied its standard criteria by ignoring the presumption that 
    respondents constitute a single entity. Petitioner argues that, in 
    fact, the Department has presumed in favor of the absence of de jure 
    and de facto control and has accepted unsupported claims and non-
    market-economy (NME) laws as the basis for single rates despite common 
    ownership of entities. Petitioner cites as evidence for the switch in 
    the presumption the fact that, in the preliminary results, the 
    Department stated that ``there is no evidence that [the authority of 
    general managers to enter into contracts] is subject to any level of 
    government control'' (citing the Preliminary Results at 40612). 
    Petitioner claims that, instead, the Department should have to find 
    that ``it has firm evidence that this authority is not subject to any 
    level of government control.''
        Petitioner also argues that the Department should make its 
    separate-rate analysis consistent with rules for evaluating affiliated 
    parties and for collapsing firms (citing section 771(33) of the Act 
    with respect to the determination of affiliated parties). In this 
    regard, Petitioner states that the Department should consider whether 
    the common owners have the ability to exercise restraint or direction 
    over the companies, including whether the owners can shift production 
    or export activities among firms. Petitioner argues that, if the 
    Department undertook such an analysis, it would find that none of the 
    respondents is entitled to a separate rate because the PRC government 
    has the ability, whether or not it exercises it in an apparent manner, 
    to control export and pricing activities, select key management, direct 
    the disposition of revenues (including export revenues), negotiate 
    contracts, and shift exports to firms with low dumping margins.
        Petitioner contends further that the Department's de jure and de 
    facto separate-rates analysis places an impossible burden of proof on 
    domestic interested parties because a state-controlled economy can 
    amend its laws and regulations without in fact relinquishing control. 
    Petitioner claims that the state can simply delete any evidence of de 
    jure control from laws, regulations, corporate charters and other 
    documents. Given this situation, Petitioner argues, both the domestic 
    industry and the Department are confronted with the requirement that 
    they prove a negative without having access to information that would 
    indicate continuing control over production and pricing decisions by 
    the state. Thus, Petitioner states, claims made by plant managers, 
    themselves interested in obtaining separate rates, become the basis for 
    the Department's de facto analysis and, without access to necessary 
    information, domestic interested parties confront an irrebuttable 
    presumption.
        Guizhou Machinery et al. respond that the Department properly 
    determined that the PRC respondents are entitled to separate rates. 
    Guizhou Machinery et al. argue that, whether the Department states, 
    ``there is no evidence of control'' or it has ``firm evidence'' of no 
    control, both statements indicate that the Department in fact found no 
    evidence of control. Guizhou Machinery et al. assert that Petitioner 
    objects to the test itself, not the words the Department used to 
    describe its findings.
        Guizhou Machinery et al. also contend that Petitioner's proposal to 
    apply the affiliated-party definition in section 771(33) of the Act 
    would eliminate the possibility of separate rates for PRC-owned firms. 
    Guizhou Machinery et al. acknowledge that, in Compact Ductile Iron 
    Waterworks Fittings from the PRC, 58 FR 37908 (July 14, 1993) (CDIW), 
    the Department determined that it would not consider a request for 
    separate rates for any state-owned company on the basis that no state-
    owned company could be sufficiently independent of state control to be 
    entitled to separate rates. However, Guizhou Machinery et al. note, the 
    Department subsequently departed from the CDIW decision and returned to 
    its former practice, with some modifications (citing Final 
    Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Silicon Carbide From 
    the People's Republic of China, 59 FR 22585 (May 2, 1994) (Silicon 
    Carbide)). Guizhou Machinery et al. argue that, in the preliminary 
    results, the Department properly employed its more recent separate-
    rates analysis methodology from Silicon Carbide.
        Guizhou Machinery et al. add that nothing in the Statement of 
    Administrative Action (SAA) suggests that Congress or the 
    Administration intended that the Department would apply the affiliated-
    party provision in NME cases in a manner that would result in 
    eliminating separate rates and, if the SAA had intended that result, 
    the SAA would not be silent on the question. Guizhou Machinery et al. 
    add that, in the House Report to the URAA, there is no mention of 
    regulatory control by state or provincial governments and no mention of 
    ``affiliation'' stemming from the fact that two entities are both 
    regulated by the same governmental entity. Further, Guizhou Machinery 
    et al. claim, while the SAA explicitly discusses the question of 
    affiliation with respect to a number of price and cost issues, it does 
    not mention separate rates issues. Guizhou Machinery et al. add that 
    section 771(33) has its roots in Article 4.1, note 11 of the Agreement 
    on Implementation of Article VI of the Uruguay Round of the General 
    Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), which contemplated control only 
    over producers and exporters, not affiliation of otherwise competing 
    exporters because of government authority or centrally exercised 
    control.
        Finally, with respect to Petitioner's argument that the nature of 
    the de jure and de facto tests imposes an impossible burden of proof on 
    Petitioner, Guizhou Machinery et al. state that it is not reasonable to 
    believe that the PRC would repeal all of its laws, regulations, and 
    corporate charters solely to guarantee that the Department will be 
    incapable of discovering any evidence of de jure control in antidumping 
    proceedings.
    Department's Position
        We disagree with Petitioner. We have calculated separate rates for 
    the responding PRC companies in these final results because each has 
    demonstrated an absence of government control over its export 
    activities.
        In CDIW, we adopted the position that state ownership (i.e., 
    ``ownership by all the people'') ``provides the central government the 
    opportunity to manipulate [the exporter's] prices, whether or not it 
    has taken advantage of that opportunity during the period of 
    investigation.'' CDIW at 37909. We determined, therefore, that state-
    owned enterprises would not be eligible for separate rates. However, we 
    have modified our separate-rates policy as set forth in CDIW. We 
    subsequently determined that ownership ``by all the people'' in and of 
    itself cannot be considered dispositive in establishing whether a 
    company can receive a separate rate. See Silicon Carbide at 22586. As 
    such, it is our policy that a PRC-based respondent is entitled to a 
    separate rate if it demonstrates on a de jure and a de facto basis that 
    there is an absence of government control over its export activities.
        A separate-rate determination does not presume to speak to more 
    than an
    
    [[Page 6175]]
    
    individual company's independence in its export activities. The 
    analysis is narrowly focused and the result, if independence is found, 
    is accordingly narrow--we analyze that single company's U.S. sales of 
    the subject merchandise separately and calculate a company-specific 
    antidumping rate. Thus, for purposes of calculating margins, we analyze 
    whether specific exporters are free of government control over their 
    export activities, using the criteria set forth in Silicon Carbide at 
    22585. Those exporters who establish their independence from government 
    control are entitled to a separate margin calculation. Thus, a finding 
    that a company is entitled to a separate rate indicates that the 
    company has sufficient control over its export activities such that the 
    manipulation of such activities by a government seeking to channel 
    exports through companies with relatively low dumping rates is not a 
    concern. See Disposable Pocket Lighters from the PRC, 60 FR 22359, 
    22363 (May 5, 1995) (Disposable Lighters); Tapered Roller Bearings and 
    Parts Thereof, Finished and Unfinished, from the PRC, 61 FR 65527, 
    65527-65528 (December 13, 1996) (TRBs IV-VI); TRBs VII, Comment 1.
        Having rejected the CDIW position that state ownership per se 
    eliminates the possibility of a company gaining a separate rate, we do 
    not accept Petitioner's argument that the statutory definition of 
    affiliated persons at section 771(33) of the Act should determine our 
    separate-rates analysis. The application of this standard is overly 
    broad for the purpose of determining whether to assign separate rates 
    to the PRC-owned companies under review.
        First, the type of state ``ownership'' involved (ownership by ``all 
    of the people'') is not the type of ``ownership'' addressed by section 
    771(33). Ownership by all of the people signifies only that ``no 
    individual can take the company . . . it belongs to the community.'' 
    Silicon Carbide at 22586. It does not mean that a single entity 
    ``controls'' all such firms. Id.
        Second, even if such firms did meet the section 771(33) 
    ``affiliated party'' standard, this definition does not determine the 
    issue of whether we should calculate separate rates for the state-owned 
    firms in this review. Instead, in order to make that determination, we 
    must consider the specific issue of de jure and de facto government 
    control over export activities. This is analogous to our practice in 
    market-economy cases of calculating individual dumping rates for 
    affiliated parties unless we determine that there is a significant 
    potential for manipulation of pricing or production decisions. With 
    respect to NME firms, we examine the potential for manipulation by the 
    government using the de jure and de facto test set forth in Silicon 
    Carbide. Thus, if the Silicon Carbide test shows that no government 
    entity controls the export activities of the firms in question so as to 
    present a significant potential for manipulation of such activities, it 
    is not appropriate to assign a single rate.
        In investigating the extent of government control over these 
    firms'' export activities, we obtained information regarding this 
    specific issue, and the PRC companies that responded to our 
    questionnaire submitted information indicating a lack of both de jure 
    and de facto government control over their export activities. Contrary 
    to Petitioner's assertions, our determination in this regard did not 
    hinge on the fact that the term ``TRBs'' does not appear on the 
    ``Temporary Provisions for Administration of Export Commodities.'' 
    Further, we are not persuaded to change our separate-rates 
    determinations based on the fact that the term ``bearings'' appears on 
    the list, particularly since the term ``bearings'' appears on a section 
    of the list that simply indicates that an exporter must obtain an 
    ``ordinary'' license in order to export bearings. Instead, as detailed 
    in the Preliminary Results (at 40611), the record evidence in this 
    case, including our verification findings, clearly indicates a lack of 
    both de jure and de facto government control over the export activities 
    of the firms to which we have assigned separate rates.
        We also do not accept Petitioner's argument that we have misapplied 
    the presumption of state control in this case. Given the information 
    that respondents provided in this review, our statement in the 
    Preliminary Results that ``there is no evidence of government control 
    over exports'' is equivalent to an affirmative statement that ``the 
    government does not control the export activities of these companies.'' 
    We were able to make this determination because the companies provided 
    information affirmatively indicating a lack of government control.
        Finally, contrary to Petitioner's claim that the necessary 
    information concerning the de facto portion of the analysis is 
    inaccessible to both Petitioner and to the Department, such information 
    was, in fact, subject to verification and was discussed in the relevant 
    verification reports. Based on our analysis of the Silicon Carbide 
    factors, the verified information on the record supports our 
    determination that these respondents are, both in law and in fact, free 
    of government control over their export activities. Thus, it would be 
    inappropriate to treat these firms as a single enterprise and assign 
    them a single margin. Accordingly, we have continued to calculate 
    separate margins for these companies. See TRBs IV-VI at 65528.
    Comment 2
        Petitioner claims that the Department improperly granted Shandong 
    and Wanxiang separate rates based on voluntary responses to the 
    separate-rates questionnaire, although these companies did not request 
    review and did not respond to any other part of the Department's 
    questionnaire. Petitioner states that the result of this finding, which 
    will allow these companies to have their POR entries assessed at their 
    POR deposit rates, is an abuse of the single-rate methodology. 
    Petitioner states that it is inappropriate that these ``non-
    respondents'' are able to obtain more favorable treatment than other 
    non-respondents. Petitioner claims that this approach is unfair because 
    it did not know of the existence of these companies and could not have 
    asked that the review cover them. Petitioner suggests that the 
    Department defer granting separate rates for Shandong and Wanxiang 
    until it conducts a review in which they are named in a review request, 
    in which case they must fully participate in the review. Petitioner 
    makes the same suggestion for Great Wall, a company that requested a 
    separate rate but whose separate-rates response the Department did not 
    analyze in the preliminary results. Petitioner adds that, even if these 
    three firms are permitted to establish separate-rate entitlement in 
    this review, the rate applicable for this period should be the rate 
    applicable had they not submitted their voluntary separate rates 
    responses, which is the PRC rate.
        Guizhou Machinery et al. respond that Petitioner provides no 
    support for its objection to the Department's stated intention to 
    liquidate Shandong and Wanxiang's POR entries at the deposit rate in 
    effect at the time of entry. Guizhou Machinery et al. and L&S state 
    that, since the Department did not review these companies'' entries 
    during this segment of the proceeding, the Act requires the liquidation 
    of their POR entries at the deposit rate in effect at the time of 
    entry. Guizhou Machinery et al. state no party requested review of 
    Shandong and Wanxiang nor did the Department name them in the notice of 
    initiation. Citing 19 CFR 353.22(e), Guizhou Machinery et al. contend 
    that, pursuant to the Department's regulations, non-reviewed companies
    
    [[Page 6176]]
    
    are subject to assessment of antidumping duties at the rate in effect 
    at the time of entry which, for these companies, is 8.83 percent.
        Great Wall requests that the Department analyze the information 
    that it submitted during the course of the review regarding the extent 
    of government control over export activities and grant Great Wall a 
    separate rate, thereby permitting assessment of Great Wall's POR 
    entries at its POR deposit rate.
    Department's Position
        We disagree with Petitioner. For these final results, we have 
    determined that the export activities of Shandong, Wanxiang, and Great 
    Wall are not subject to de jure or de facto government control. 
    Accordingly, these firms are not part of the ``PRC enterprise'' under 
    review and, because no interested party requested a review of these 
    firms, they are not subject to this review. Because we did not include 
    these firms in this review, we will instruct Customs to apply the 
    respective deposit rates to these companies'' POR entries for purposes 
    of assessment.
        As explained in our response to comment 1, it is our policy to 
    treat all exporters of subject merchandise in NME countries as a single 
    government-controlled enterprise in the absence of sufficient evidence 
    to the contrary. We assign that enterprise a single rate (the ``PRC 
    rate'), except for those exporters that demonstrate an absence of 
    government control over export activity. Pursuant to this policy, if 
    any company for which a review was requested is found to be part of the 
    ``PRC enterprise,'' the entire enterprise (including those companies 
    that we do not name in the initiation) is subject to the review. Thus, 
    we request that the PRC government identify all firms that exported 
    during the POR and contact such firms regarding their participation in 
    the review. This ensures that we fully capture the presumed ``PRC 
    enterprise'' (further explained in our response to comment 27). Any 
    company that does not place information on the record indicating that 
    it is separate from the PRC government with respect to export 
    activities will be covered by the review as part of the PRC enterprise 
    and will receive the PRC rate as an assessment rate for POR entries. 
    The PRC enterprise is not subject to review only if all firms for which 
    a review is requested respond and demonstrate that they are independent 
    from government control over exports. That is not the case in this 
    review.
        The three firms at issue have demonstrated that they are 
    independent from PRC-government control over their export activities. 
    See Preliminary Results at 40611-12 regarding Shandong and Wanxiang; 
    see Memorandum from Analyst to File: Separate-Rate Determination for 
    Great Wall Bearing Company, February 3, 1997, regarding Great Wall. 
    Thus, we have determined that they are not part of the PRC enterprise. 
    Because these companies are not part of the PRC enterprise and no 
    review of these companies was requested, they are not subject to this 
    review. Therefore, the automatic assessment provisions (19 CFR 
    353.22(e)) apply. Petitioner's contention that we should, in effect, 
    review companies for which no review was requested is inconsistent with 
    our normal practice of conducting reviews upon request only, as 
    provided in section 751(a) of the Act. Accordingly, as with all 
    unreviewed companies, POR entries of Shandong, Wanxiang and Great Wall 
    will be liquidated at the deposit rates.
    
    2. Valuation of Factors of Production
    
    Comment 3
        Petitioner argues that the Department should base the values of all 
    factors of production (FOP) on the annual report of SKF India (SKF). 
    Petitioner notes that, for the preliminary results, the Department used 
    the SKF report to value three factors (overhead; selling, general, and 
    administrative expenses (SG&A); and profit), whereas the Department 
    derived values for the direct labor and raw-material factors from two 
    other, unrelated, sources (Investing, Licensing & Trading Conditions 
    Abroad, India (IL&T India) statistics and Indian import statistics, 
    respectively). Petitioner claims that it is inherently distortive to 
    use sources other than the SKF report to value labor and raw materials 
    because SKF's labor and raw-material costs are included in the costs 
    used in calculating SKF's overhead, SG&A, and profit ratios, which the 
    Department uses in its surrogate calculation.
        Petitioner also contends that SKF's materials and labor costs are 
    the ``best information'' with respect to these factors because they 
    represent actual costs in the preferred surrogate country, whereas the 
    steel-import statistics and labor data have little connection with 
    costs related to production of TRBs.
        Thus, Petitioner argues, whereas SKF's costs and expenses represent 
    those of a producer of the class or kind of merchandise subject to 
    review, the surrogate data for raw materials and direct labor which the 
    Department used cover a broad range of industries and products. With 
    respect to raw materials, Petitioner asserts that the ``other'' alloy-
    steel category from the Indian import statistics, which the Department 
    used to value material costs for the preliminary results, is broad and 
    may or may not include imports of the steel used to produce bearings. 
    Petitioner contends that, even if this category includes steel used to 
    produce bearings, such steel likely represents only a small part of 
    steel imports in the basket category. With respect to direct labor, 
    Petitioner claims that the classification the Department used covers, 
    in addition to bearings producers, hundreds of industry sectors under 
    broad headings unrelated to bearings production and argues that there 
    is no rational basis for using such a non-specific source as a 
    surrogate. Petitioner states that it is appropriate to apply SKF's 
    average labor cost to all types of labor, including direct production, 
    production overhead, and SG&A, since all of these labor categories 
    would be part of the aggregate labor cost in SKF's annual report.
        Petitioner states that the use of the SKF report for all FOP values 
    is consistent with the importance the courts attach to internal 
    coherence and the use of a single source when possible (citing Timken 
    Co. v. United States, 699 F. Supp. 300, 306, 307 (1988), affirmed, 894 
    F.2d 385 (Fed. Cir. 1990) (collectively Timken)). Petitioner urges the 
    Department to use the same annual report.
        Petitioner argues in the alternative that, in the event the 
    Department does not use the SKF report to value all FOP, the Department 
    must adjust the overhead, SG&A, and profit rates to reflect the use of 
    lower materials and labor values from the separate sources. Petitioner 
    claims that the Department's preliminary calculations were distortive 
    because the Department used SKF's full material and labor costs in the 
    cost of manufacturing (COM) denominator but applied this ratio to 
    material and labor factors that it developed using lower-valued sources 
    (Indian import statistics and ILT labor data, respectively). Petitioner 
    concludes that, because of SKF's overhead, SG&A and profit percentages 
    are linked to SKF's own materials and labor costs, those percentages 
    must be adjusted upward (by reducing the denominators used to derive 
    these percentages) if the Department multiplies these ratios by 
    material and labor costs from other sources to derive the per-unit 
    overhead, SG&A, and profit rates.
        Petitioner proposes that, in order to derive non-distortive 
    material and labor portions of the overhead and SG&A ratio 
    denominators, the Department should
    
    [[Page 6177]]
    
    multiply the total weight of materials for SKF by the highest value of 
    steel that it uses in the final results and should multiply the total 
    number of hours worked at SKF by the IL&T India labor value it uses for 
    the final results. Petitioner adds that this calculation is preferable 
    to the overhead, SG&A, and profit denominators that the Department used 
    in the preliminary results because it will result in a materials cost 
    exclusive of Indian import duties.
        Guizhou Machinery et al. respond that it is irrelevant whether the 
    SKF report represents a single source for valuing all FOP components 
    and note that the Department consistently uses multiple sources of 
    information for surrogate data in NME cases, selecting the best source 
    for each element of the FOP. Guizhou Machinery et al. argue that the 
    fact that SKF India is a producer of TRBs in the surrogate country does 
    not mean that its report is a proper source for all surrogate data, 
    adding that, in most NME cases, the Department uses multiple sources of 
    information for surrogate data, choosing the best one for each element 
    for the factors of production. Guizhou Machinery et al. state that 
    Petitioner's citation to Timken is misplaced because, in that case, the 
    Court of International Trade (CIT) remanded the case to the Department 
    because the rationale for selecting a particular value for steel scrap 
    was inconsistent with the record and the Department had not explained 
    the inconsistency. Guizhou Machinery et al. claim that the Department 
    was not criticized in Timken for the use of different sources of 
    surrogate data. East Sea adds that the SKF report, though audited, is 
    not verified data and notes that the Department has a preference for 
    verifiable, public information.
        With respect to Petitioner's proposal that the Department use SKF 
    data to determine the raw-material-factor value, East Sea and Guizhou 
    Machinery et al. argue that the raw-material data in the SKF report is 
    inferior to import statistics due to a lack of detail regarding the 
    types of steel SKF used. Guizhou Machinery et al. state that, in this 
    review, the raw-material-input value is the critical factor in the 
    analysis and there is no evidence to indicate that SKF India used the 
    same kind of steel as the respondents, whereas import statistics allow 
    the Department to pinpoint a particular input. East Sea notes that the 
    SKF report does not provide separate prices for bar, rod or steel sheet 
    but instead provides a single value for all steel used in the factory, 
    including steel used in the production of non-subject merchandise. East 
    Sea submits that Petitioner, Respondents, and the Department do not 
    know what types of steel were included in SKF's material-cost 
    calculation. East Sea suggests that the steel referenced in the SKF 
    report could be tube steel (instead of bar steel), stainless steel (a 
    much more expensive product), already machined ``green parts'' supplied 
    by SKF's many related companies, or innumerable other types of steel. 
    Guizhou Machinery et al. add that Petitioner has provided no 
    information demonstrating that the SKF report covers the specific steel 
    inputs relevant to subject merchandise.
        With respect to Petitioner's claim that the Department should 
    calculate the labor factor using SKF data, Guizhou Machinery et al. 
    contend that Petitioner has provided no evidence to support its claim 
    that the labor costs of a subsidiary of a Swedish company, SKF, are a 
    better surrogate for labor costs than is an average for the surrogate 
    country. Guizhou Machinery et al. state that it is the Department's 
    practice to use industry-wide data, not producer-specific data, where 
    possible, and suggest that Petitioner's proposal would risk introducing 
    abnormalities unique to that producer. East Sea adds that, because the 
    SKF report does not differentiate between administrative and 
    manufacturing personnel, the Department cannot use the SKF data to 
    value labor. East Sea explains that the majority of workers producing 
    subject merchandise in this review are unskilled laborers and, because 
    the Department verified the Chinese bearing producers, the Department 
    has specific knowledge of the skill level in China.
        With respect to Petitioner's argument that, if the Department 
    continues to value the material and labor factors using non-SKF 
    sources, the Department must adjust the overhead, SG&A, and profit 
    rates to reflect the use of lower materials and labor values, Guizhou 
    Machinery et al. respond that the Department's use of data in SKF's 
    annual report to establish percentages or ratios to be used for 
    determination of the surrogate values for overhead and SG&A is fully 
    consistent with the Department's standard surrogate methodology. 
    Guizhou Machinery et al. state that the Department's NME/surrogate-
    country methodology is based upon the application of reliable and 
    representative ratios and input values from multiple sources and 
    contend that the Department does not typically ``adjust'' the component 
    values used to derive SG&A and overhead ratios in the manner suggested 
    by Petitioner. Consequently, Guizhou Machinery et al. argue, the 
    Department should not adjust the expenses taken from the SKF report, as 
    suggested by Petitioner, to formulate representative ratios for use in 
    determining actual amounts for overhead and SG&A. In support of this 
    contention, Guizhou Machinery et al. cite Final Determination of Sales 
    at Less Than Fair Value: Coumarin From the People's Republic of China, 
    59 FR 66895 (December 28, 1994) (Coumarin), in which the Department 
    calculated materials costs from various sources and used the Reserve 
    Bank of India Bulletin (RBI) data to calculate SG&A but did not adjust 
    SG&A and overhead costs.
        East Sea adds that it would be illogical to adjust overhead and 
    SG&A as the Petitioner suggests for three reasons: (1) the Department 
    has no idea what kind of steel SKF uses and replacement of SKF's 
    material costs in the overhead and SG&A denominators with Indian import 
    costs does not improve the reliability of the SKF overhead or SG&A 
    data; (2) SKF's overhead rate reflects the experience of a 
    sophisticated bearing factory and the Department has long recognized 
    that industrialized countries have higher overhead rates than do 
    companies in less industrialized countries, so that the overhead rate 
    should not be adjusted upward; and (3) SKF's overhead costs reflect the 
    unique experience of SKF, which is the leading producer in the world 
    and uses the finest raw materials and state-of-the-art technology to 
    produce its bearings--as such, the Department would be mixing apples 
    and oranges to substitute Indian import steel prices for SKF's own 
    prices in order to create a hybrid overhead or SG&A rate.
    Department's Position:
        We agree with Respondents. Section 773(c)(1) of the Act states 
    that, for purposes of determining NV in a NME, ``the valuation of the 
    FOP shall be based on the best available information regarding the 
    values of such factors. . . .'' As we stated in TRBs IV-VI and TRBs 
    VII, our preference is to value factors using published information 
    (PI) that is closest in time with the specific POR. See also Final 
    Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Certain Partial-
    Extension Drawer Slides From the People's Republic of China, 60 FR 
    54472, 54476 (October 24, 1995) (Drawer Slides). Based on the record 
    evidence we have determined that surrogate-country import statistics 
    (Indonesian for valuing steel used to produce cups and cones, Indian 
    for steel used to produce rollers and cages), exclusive of import 
    duties, comprise the best available information for valuing raw-
    material costs. Our reasons for preferring data for Indonesia, rather
    
    [[Page 6178]]
    
    than for our primary surrogate, India, for valuing steel used to 
    produce cups and cones are set forth in our response to Comment 4.
        We prefer published surrogate import data to the SKF data in 
    valuing the material FOP for the following reasons. First, we are able 
    to obtain data specific to the POR, which more closely reflect the 
    costs to producers during the POR. Second, the raw-material costs from 
    the SKF report do not specify the types of steel SKF purchased. The 
    record does not indicate whether SKF purchased bar steel (the type used 
    by the Chinese manufacturers) or more expensive tube steel to produce 
    bearings parts. Third, although we agree with Petitioner that SKF is a 
    producer of subject merchandise, the report also identifies other 
    products it manufactures. From the information in the SKF report, we 
    are unable to allocate direct labor and raw-materials expenses to the 
    production of subject merchandise. For these reasons, we have valued 
    the material FOP using surrogate import data.
        Furthermore, we agree with Respondents that Petitioner's citation 
    to Timken for the proposition that the Department must use a single 
    surrogate source when possible is misplaced. That case, although 
    critical of the Department, does not state that all factors must be 
    valued in the same surrogate country. Indeed, the opinion in Timken 
    explicitly states that ``Commerce may avail itself of data from a 
    country other than the designated conduit, adoption of such an inter-
    surrogate methodology [although departing from the normal practice at 
    that time] remains within the scope of Commerce's discretionary 
    power.'' Timken at 304.
        We also disagree with Petitioner's contention that we should adjust 
    the overhead and SG&A rates if we continue to use the SKF report to 
    value these rates while valuing the material and labor FOP using other 
    sources. As noted above, we prefer to base our factors information on 
    industry-wide PI. Because such information is not available regarding 
    overhead and SG&A rates for producers of subject merchandise during the 
    POR (except for the indirect labor portion of overhead and SG&A, which 
    we valued separately--see Comment 8, below), we used the overhead and 
    SG&A rates applicable to SKF India, a company that produces subject and 
    non-subject merchandise.
        In deriving these rates, we used the SKF data both with respect to 
    the numerators (total overhead and SG&A expenses, respectively) and 
    denominator (total cost of manufacturing). This methodology allowed us 
    to derive internally consistent ratios of SKF India's overhead and SG&A 
    expenses. These ratios, when multiplied by the FOP we used in our 
    analysis, thereby constitute the best available information concerning 
    the overhead and SG&A expenses that would be incurred by a PRC bearings 
    producer given such FOP. Petitioner's recommended adjustment would 
    affect (reduce) the denominator, but it would leave the overhead and 
    SG&A expenses in the numerator unchanged. As such, we find that this 
    adjustment would itself distort the resulting ratio, rather than curing 
    the alleged distortion in our calculations.
        Finally, with respect to Petitioner's assertion that the overhead, 
    SG&A, and profit denominators we used in the preliminary results 
    improperly included import duties paid, we note that Petitioner has not 
    provided any information regarding the amount of import duties that are 
    included nor has Petitioner provided a means of identifying and 
    eliminating such duties from our calculations. Although we would not 
    include duties paid on the importation of merchandise by SKF, we have 
    no evidence as to the amount of duties, if any, that are included in 
    SKF's raw-materials costs. Therefore, we did not subtract any amount 
    for import duties in our calculation of overhead and SG&A percentages. 
    See TRBs IV-VI at 65529-65530 and TRBs VII, Comment 2.
    
    2. (a)  Material Valuation
    
    Comment 4
        East Sea and Guizhou Machinery et al. contend that the Indian 
    import category (7228.30.19) which the Department used to value the 
    steel used to produce cups and cones in the preliminary results is an 
    inappropriate source because the values derived using this category do 
    not accurately reflect the cost to PRC producers of the hot-rolled 
    alloy-steel bar used to produce these components. Respondents state 
    that the Department should value this steel using a source that more 
    accurately reflects the input costs incurred by PRC producers.
        East Sea argues that Indian import category 7228.30.19 contains a 
    wide variety of steel products and a correspondingly wide range of 
    prices. In this regard, East Sea notes that the average price per 
    metric ton of steel contained in this category ranges from $610 to 
    $4,860. East Sea states that the overall steel value per metric ton the 
    Department derived using this category (over $1,400) far exceeds the 
    value of steel used by PRC producers to manufacture TRBs.
        East Sea states that it is Department practice to compare the 
    surrogate steel prices it selects with world prices to determine if the 
    proposed surrogate values for steel are aberrational. East Sea notes 
    that, in Heavy Forged Hand Tools from the PRC, the Department 
    determined that Indian import statistics were aberrational in 
    comparison with Indonesian and U.S. import statistics (citing Final 
    Results of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review: Heavy Forged Hand 
    Tools from the PRC, 60 FR 49241, 49254 (September 22, 1995) (Hand 
    Tools), Furfuryl Alcohol from the PRC, 60 FR 225444 (May 8, 1995) 
    (Furfuryl Alcohol), and Certain Cased Pencils from the PRC, 59 FR 55625 
    (November 4, 1994) (Pencils)). East Sea adds that the Department's 
    Proposed Rules also indicate that the Department will test surrogate 
    values against international prices.
        East Sea suggests, as an alternative to the Indian data the 
    Department used in the preliminary results, an ``international'' price 
    of $673 per metric ton, which it derived using U.S., Japanese, and 
    European Union (E.U.) import statistics. East Sea contends that this 
    value approximates the corresponding steel value used in a recent 
    review of TRBs from Romania, where the surrogate value for steel used 
    in cups and cones was $718 per metric ton (citing Preliminary Results 
    of Antidumping Administrative Review: Tapered Roller Bearings from the 
    Romania, 68 FR 15465 (April 8, 1996)).
        East Sea argues in the alternative that, if the Department 
    continues to value cups and cones using Indian import statistics, it 
    should modify this value by excluding from its calculations all 
    individual steel import values in excess of $1,421 per metric ton as 
    not reflective of the price of bearing-quality steel. East Sea states 
    that this ceiling is not arbitrary because it is the average value 
    derived in the preliminary results and is the highest surrogate value 
    that the Department has ever selected in its bearings cases.
        Guizhou Machinery et al. agree with East Sea that: (1) the 
    surrogate value that the Department used in the preliminary results is 
    aberrational when compared with U.S., E.U., and Japanese import 
    statistics, and (2) the Department has an established practice, as 
    noted in the Proposed Regulations, of testing potential surrogate 
    values against international prices (citing, inter alia, Disposable 
    Lighters; Coumarin; Silicon Carbide; Drawer Slides; Helical Spring Lock 
    Washers from the PRC, 58 FR
    
    [[Page 6179]]
    
    48833, 48835 (September 20, 1993) (Lock Washers); and Saccharin from 
    the PRC, 59 FR 58818 (November 15, 1994) (Saccharin)). Guizhou 
    Machinery et al. add that the Indian import values that the Department 
    used in the preliminary results are nearly three times the value of 
    Indian export prices of the same steel and state that this constitutes 
    further evidence that the import values are aberrational.
        With respect to the appropriate alternative to Indian import 
    values, Guizhou Machinery et al. support East Sea's proposed surrogate 
    value of $673 per metric ton, based on an average of U.S., E.U., and 
    Japanese import statistics, as the best alternative value. Guizhou 
    Machinery et al. state that this value is in accord with the 
    Department's practice of basing factor values on multiple sources when 
    necessary and is preferable to using data from other countries listed 
    on the Department's Surrogate Country Selection Memorandum because none 
    of these countries is a significant producer of bearings.
        Petitioner contends that Respondents' arguments that the value of 
    steel in Indian import category 7228.30.19 used in the preliminary 
    results far exceeds the value of steel used to manufacture TRBs are 
    incorrect. Petitioner maintains that this category is the best 
    valuation source for the steel used to produce cups and cones if the 
    Department determines not to use the SKF Report for this purpose (see 
    Comment 3).
        Petitioner states that Indian data is preferable to the U.S./E.U./
    Japan average import value proposed by Respondents because India meets 
    the statutory criteria for factor valuation, i.e., it is a comparable 
    economy to the PRC and is a significant producer of comparable 
    merchandise (citing section 773(c) of the Act). Petitioner claims that 
    the use of a developed-country average, as suggested by Respondents, 
    would violate the statute and adds that the Department previously 
    rejected the use of E.U. statistics for valuation purposes in the 1989-
    90 review of this order. Petitioner adds that Respondents' analysis of 
    Japanese import statistics is based on a questionable reading of 
    Japanese HTS classifications.
        With respect to the cases that Respondents cite in support of their 
    position that their proposal is in accord with Department practice 
    regarding seeking alternative valuation sources where the primary 
    surrogate value is aberrational, Petitioner responds that, in those 
    cases, unlike this proceeding, the Department had a plausible reason to 
    deviate from its preferred practice because the preferred data were 
    unsupported by reliable evidence and were contradicted by consistent 
    information from other sources, which usually included another 
    surrogate.
        Petitioner states that the cases Respondents cite may be 
    distinguished from the present review as follows: (1) in Coumarin, the 
    rejected Indian source conflicted with other sources within India; (2) 
    in Silicon Carbide, the Department did not use the preferred data 
    because they either pertained to further-processed products or involved 
    a small tonnage priced too high to be considered reasonable; (3) in 
    Disposable Lighters, the Department used exports from India instead of 
    imports because imports were not significant; (4) in Pencils, the 
    Department used imports from a secondary surrogate instead of the 
    primary surrogate (India) because the Indian values were inconsistent 
    with both Pakistani values and values provided in the petition; (5) in 
    Lock Washers, the Indian values the Department rejected were over 1,000 
    percent higher than the comparison values; (6) in Drawer Slides, the 
    Indian values the Department rejected were several times higher than 
    the comparison values; (7) in Saccharin, the Department used an average 
    of export statistics from five developed countries because it had 
    difficulty finding an appropriate surrogate; (8) in Hand Tools, the 
    Department rejected Indian import values in favor of Indonesian and 
    U.S. values because imports into India were not significant; (9) in 
    Furfuryl Alcohol, the Department rejected the primary surrogate's 
    (Indonesia) import data in favor of export data from the same 
    surrogate; and (10) in Steel Pipe, the Department excluded certain 
    imports that were clearly of a higher quality than the steel used by 
    Respondent in that case.
        Petitioner adds that East Sea's alternative proposal, that, if the 
    Department continues to use Indian import statistics it should exclude 
    all individual import values greater than $1,421, is incorrect because 
    it focuses only on individual import values that may be aberrationally 
    high while ignoring those values that may be aberrationally low.
    Department Position
        We agree with East Sea and Guizhou Machinery et al. None of the 
    eight-digit tariff categories within the Indian 7228.30 steel group 
    corresponds specifically to bearing-quality steel used to manufacture 
    cups and cones, and we do not agree with Petitioner that the best 
    alternative, aside from valuing steel using the SKF Report, is to use 
    the eight-digit ``others'' category (7228.30.19) within this group. 
    Instead, we have determined that the use of Indian import data is not 
    appropriate to value steel used to produce cups and cones in this case 
    because we are unable to isolate an Indian import value for bearing-
    quality steel and, more importantly, the steel values in the Indian 
    import data are not reliable, as further discussed below.
        As in TRBs IV-VI and TRBs VII, we have examined each of the eight-
    digit categories within the Indian 7228.30 group and have found that, 
    although bearing-quality steel used to manufacture cups and cones is 
    most likely contained within this basket category, there is no eight-
    digit sub-category that is reasonably specific to this type of steel. 
    We eliminated the specific categories of alloy steel that are clearly 
    not bearing-quality steel as follows. Under the Indian tariff system, 
    bearing-quality steel used to manufacture cups and cones is contained 
    within the broad category 7228.30 (Other Bars & Rods, Hot-Rolled, Hot-
    Drawn & Extruded). However, none of the named sub-categories of this 
    grouping (7228.30.01--bright bars of alloy tool steel; 7228.30.09--
    bright bars of other steel; 7228.30.12--bars and rods of spring steel; 
    and 7228.30.14--bars and rods of tool and die steel) contains steel 
    used in the production of subject merchandise. This leaves an 
    ``others'' category of steel, 7228.30.19. However, we have no 
    information concerning what this category contains, and none of the 
    parties in this proceeding has suggested that this category 
    specifically isolates bearing-quality steel. Further, the value of 
    steel in this eight-digit residual category is greater than the value 
    of the general six-digit basket category (7228.30) which, in turn, is 
    valued too high to be considered a reliable indicator of the price of 
    bearing-quality steel, as shown below.
        Where questions have been raised about PI with respect to 
    particular material input prices in a chosen surrogate country, it is 
    the Department's responsibility to examine that PI. See Drawer Slides 
    at 54475-76, Cased Pencils, 59 FR 55633, 55629 (1994), TRBs IV-VI at 
    65531, and TRBs VII. Because all parties raised questions about the 
    validity of the Indian import data used to value cups and cones in the 
    preliminary results, we compared the value of Indian imports in 
    category 7228.30 with the only record source that specifically isolates 
    bearing-quality steel used to manufacture cups and cones: U.S. import 
    data regarding tariff category 7228.20.30 (``bearing-quality steel''). 
    We found that, for the time period covered by the POR, the value of
    
    [[Page 6180]]
    
    the Indian basket category 7228.30 was significantly higher than that 
    for the bearing-quality steel imported into the United States. It was 
    also significantly higher in comparison with E.U. import 
    statistics.1 The Indian eight-digit ``others'' category 
    recommended by Petitioner was higher than any of these sources.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \1\ Although the E.U. import data do not explicitly identify 
    ``bearing-quality steel,'' the relevant subheadings (7228.30.40, 
    7228.30.41, and 7228.30.49) provide narrative descriptions that 
    closely match the chemical composition of the bar steel that the PRC 
    respondents used to produce cups and cones. See Memorandum from 
    Analyst to File: Factors of Production for the Final Results of the 
    1994-95 Administrative Review of TRBs from the PRC, February 3, 
    1997.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        In light of these findings, we have determined that the Indian 
    import data that we used to value cups and cones in the preliminary 
    results are not reliable. For these final results, we have used import 
    data from another surrogate country, Indonesia, a producer of 
    merchandise comparable to TRBs, to value steel used to produce these 
    components. As with the Indian data, we were unable to isolate the 
    value of bearing-quality steel or identify an eight-digit category 
    containing such steel imported into Indonesia; however, unlike the 
    Indian data, the Indonesian six-digit category 7228.30 is consistent 
    with the value of U.S. imports of bearing-quality steel, as well as the 
    comparable six-digit category in the United States. Thus, we have 
    determined that Indonesian category 7228.30, which is the narrowest 
    category we can determine would contain bearing-quality steel, is the 
    best available information for valuing steel used to produce cups and 
    cones. Although Indonesia is not the first-choice surrogate country in 
    this review, in past cases the Department has used values from other 
    surrogate countries for inputs where the value for the first-choice 
    surrogate country was determined to be unreliable. See Drawer Slides at 
    54475-76, Cased Pencils at 55629, and Lock Washers at 48835. Further, 
    Indonesia has previously been used as a secondary source of surrogate 
    data in cases involving the PRC where, as here, use of Indian data was 
    inappropriate even though India was the primary surrogate. See, e.g., 
    Chrome-Plated Lug Nuts from the PRC; Final Results of Antidumping Duty 
    Administrative Review, 61 FR 58514, 58517-18 (November 15, 1996).
        Petitioner's attempt to distinguish the instant proceeding from the 
    cases in which we have departed from a primary surrogate in fact 
    demonstrates that there are a variety of factual situations in which 
    recourse to a secondary source is appropriate with respect to the 
    valuation of a given factor. Accordingly, we must determine the 
    reliability of each factor based on the facts of each case. In this 
    review, as noted above, a comparison of the Indian import values for 
    the basket category containing steel used by the PRC respondents to 
    produce cups and cones with other, more precise, data regarding such 
    ``bearing-quality'' steel indicates that the Indian values are 
    inappropriate. In contrast, the Indonesian data that we have chosen 
    closely approximate observable market prices for this specific input 
    and therefore constitute a more appropriate valuation source.
        Finally, we note that, because we are valuing the steel used to 
    produce cups and cones using Indonesian import data, we are valuing the 
    scrap offset to this steel value using the same source.
    Comment 5
        Petitioner asserts that the Department used the incorrect Indian 
    tariff classification number to value steel for cages in the 
    preliminary results. Petitioner states that the Department used 
    subheading 7209.42.00, a category that does not specify carbon content, 
    an essential characteristic that Respondents used in their descriptions 
    of the Chinese grade GB699-65 steel used to produce cages. Petitioner 
    states that this steel type is low-carbon steel, with a carbon content 
    ranging between 0.07 and 0.14 percent by weight. Petitioner suggests 
    that, if the Department does not value steel using the SKF Report, it 
    should use Indian subheading 7211.41.00, which specifies a carbon 
    content of less than 0.25 percent carbon by weight, to value steel used 
    to produce cages.
        Guizhou Machinery et al. respond that subheading 7211.41.00 is not 
    an appropriate valuation source for cage steel because there is 
    insufficient information on the record regarding the thickness of steel 
    entering into this category. In this regard, Respondents note that all 
    that is known is that the thickness of such steel is greater than 600 
    mm, while the thickness of subheading 7209.42.00 has more defined 
    boundaries (between 0 and 600 mm). Respondents also state that, 
    although subheading 7211.41.00 lists carbon content, it does not 
    specify the content of a number of other elements, including manganese, 
    silicon, and chromium. Accordingly, Respondents contend, the fact that 
    Petitioner's preferred subheading specifies carbon content is 
    insufficient reason to change its established preference.
    Department's Position
        We disagree with Petitioner. As in past reviews, we are using 
    Indian tariff subheading 7209.42.00. This subheading involves cold-
    rolled steel sheet, which the PRC respondents use to produce cages. 
    Conversely, the subheading that petitioner recommends (7211.41.00) 
    involves hot-rolled sheet and is not, therefore, an appropriate 
    category for valuing steel used to produce cages.
    Comment 6
        Petitioner states that the Department's FOP Memorandum indicates 
    that it used Indian tariff subheading 7204.49 to value non-alloy scrap 
    resulting from the production of cages while the actual calculations 
    indicate that the Department used subheading 7204.41.00. Petitioner 
    suggests that, if the Department in fact uses subheading 7204.49 for 
    the final results, it should only use data for item 7204.49.09 
    (``other'), which will allow the Department to exclude the inapplicable 
    data for ``defective sheet of iron and steel'' at item 7204.49.01.
        Guizhou Machinery et al. respond that the Department should use 
    subheading 7204.49, as it stated in its FOP Memorandum. Respondents 
    state that subheading 7204.41.00 is inappropriate because it does not 
    include waste from steel-sheet products. Respondents add that, contrary 
    to Petitioner's assertion, the Department need not exclude subheading 
    7204.40.01, since this category specifically includes scrap from steel 
    sheet.
    Department's Position
        We disagree with Guizhou Machinery et al. For these final results, 
    we have used Indian import category 7204.41.00 to value scrap used in 
    the production of cages. As we noted in TRBs VII (Comment 5), this 
    category best describes the types of scrap created during the 
    production of cages, i.e., turnings, shavings, chips, trimmings, 
    stampings, etc. Further, although we agree with Petitioner that our FOP 
    Memorandum and our calculations were inconsistent in the preliminary 
    results, its comments regarding the exclusion of certain data from 
    subheading 7204.49 are moot because we have not used this subheading 
    for the final results.
    Comment 7
        Petitioner states that Respondents failed to make allowance for 
    defective products in their calculations of per-unit material and labor 
    quantities. Petitioner recommends adjustment of
    
    [[Page 6181]]
    
    Respondents'' COM upward to account for defective products.
        Petitioner states that, in calculating materials and labor usage 
    per unit of output, most Respondents reported that they divided the 
    weight of steel issued and the total labor hours worked by the number 
    of units produced. Petitioner contends that these calculations do not 
    take into account that a percentage of total units produced will 
    inevitably be defective products which consume materials, labor, and 
    overhead but cannot be sold. Petitioner claims for instance that, in 
    the previous review, Shanghai General Bearing Company 2 reported 
    publicly that it uses a ``two-percent allowance . . . based on the 
    company's empirical evidence of how much production fails to pass 
    inspection'' (citing Shanghai General Public Verification Report for 
    1993-94 Review). Petitioner suggests that the Department revise its 
    calculations of COM upward by 0.2 percent for all respondents in order 
    to account for unreported defective production.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \2\ Because we revoked Shanghai General in the 1993-94 
    administrative review, we are not addressing issues involving this 
    company in the 1994-95 review. However, we include reference to 
    Shanghai General here because Petitioner's contention concerns the 
    application of Shanghai General data to other respondents that are 
    involved in this review.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Guizhou Machinery et al. respond that the Department's 
    questionnaire does not request that Respondents provide any data on 
    production defect rates and, therefore, the Department has no basis for 
    making any inferences regarding the production of defective bearings. 
    Guizhou Machinery et al. add that Petitioner offers no evidence to 
    support the theory that the experience of Shanghai General is 
    representative of other Chinese producers.
        East Sea claims that Petitioner's suggestion that the Department 
    increase COM by 0.2 percent is misguided because there is no evidence 
    that Respondents have accounted improperly for defective products. East 
    Sea states that, in fact, it has reported FOP for finished products, 
    i.e., factors data required to produce satisfactory, non-defective 
    products.
    Department's Position
        We disagree with Petitioner. While we agree that, in calculating 
    per-unit material and labor quantities, Respondents must account for 
    defective products properly, Petitioner has provided no evidence that 
    Respondents did not do so. The fact that one company, Shanghai General, 
    that stated explicitly it accounted for defective products properly 
    does not mean that Respondents in this review did not, particularly 
    since that statement was made in a previous review. In fact, 
    Respondents generally account for defective products by including all 
    material and labor quantities for all products produced (including 
    defective products) in the numerator of the per-unit material and labor 
    calculations while basing the denominator (number of units produced) 
    only on those units that pass inspection and are saleable. Where we 
    find, generally through verification, that this is not the case, we 
    adjust the denominator accordingly. See TRBs IV-VI at 65540 (Comment 
    23). However, as Guizhou Machinery et al. note, we did not ask 
    Respondents to provide specific data regarding production-defect rates 
    in our questionnaire nor would we use such rates in our calculations. 
    Therefore, it would be inappropriate to draw an adverse inference from 
    the lack of data on the record regarding such rates.
    
    2.(b)  Labor Valuation
    
    Comment 8
        Petitioner objects to the Department's treatment of indirect labor. 
    Specifically, Petitioner claims that, in the preliminary results, the 
    Department valued indirect labor as a percentage of SKF's total labor 
    cost and included a portion of indirect labor in overhead and a portion 
    in SG&A. Petitioner contends that, instead of valuing indirect labor in 
    this manner, the Department should value this expense using its FOP 
    methodology, as it did with direct labor, then combine direct and 
    indirect labor to derive a total labor expense. Petitioner states that, 
    unlike indirect labor, the Department calculated direct labor in the 
    manner the statute envisions, as a factor of production to which the 
    Department applied the Indian surrogate value.
        Petitioner suggests valuing indirect labor as follows. Petitioner 
    claims that most respondents reported that indirect overhead labor is 
    20 percent of direct labor and that indirect SG&A labor is also 20 
    percent of direct labor. Petitioner suggests that, since indirect-labor 
    hours are 40 percent of direct-labor hours, the Department should 
    calculate a total (direct plus indirect) labor value by multiplying the 
    direct-labor hours by 1.4, then applying the Indian surrogate-labor 
    value to this quantity.
        Guizhou Machinery et al. respond by noting that, in NME cases, the 
    Department has treated indirect labor as an overhead cost, not as a 
    direct labor cost. Guizhou Machinery et al. add that the questionnaire 
    requests that Respondents report assembly labor and indirect labor 
    separately and contend, therefore, that the Department should reject 
    Petitioner's proposal.
    Department's Position
        We agree with Petitioner, in part. Petitioner is correct in 
    asserting that, where we have the data to calculate expenses incurred 
    by NME respondents using the factors of production methodology (i.e., 
    multiplying a respondent's reported per-unit usage rates by surrogate 
    values), we should do so. See section 776(c) of the Act. With respect 
    to indirect labor, data on the record allow us to calculate the per-
    unit quantities of such labor attributable to overhead and to SG&A. We 
    also have reliable surrogate information regarding labor values in 
    India (IL&T data). Accordingly, for the final results, we valued 
    indirect labor attributable to overhead and indirect labor attributable 
    to SG&A by multiplying the respective per-unit labor hours by the IL&T 
    labor rate.
        However, although we agree with Petitioner regarding the 
    appropriate methodology for deriving the indirect labor expense, we 
    disagree with Petitioner's proposal that we should include the total 
    per-unit indirect-labor expense together with the per-unit direct-labor 
    expense, effectively calculating a single, per-unit labor expense. In 
    recommending that we create a single, total labor amount, presumably to 
    be included as part of COM (Petitioner does not specify where to 
    include this total labor value), Petitioner incorrectly attributes all 
    indirect labor to COM instead of allocating this expense to both 
    overhead and SG&A, as reported by Respondents. In this respect, the 
    methodology that we used in the preliminary results, wherein we 
    allocated indirect labor to overhead and to SG&A using the allocation 
    percentages reported by Respondents, conforms to our practice of 
    considering indirect labor as labor attributable to both overhead and 
    to SG&A operations (e.g., supervisory and sales personnel). See Final 
    Determination of Sales at Less Than Fair Value: Sebacic Acid from the 
    PRC, 59 FR 28053, 28059-60 (Sebacic Acid). Accordingly, while we have 
    valued indirect labor in the manner that Petitioner recommends, we have 
    allocated this expense to both overhead and SG&A.
    Comment 9
        Petitioner argues that, in calculating the surrogate value for 
    labor, the Department should make allowance for vacation, sick leave 
    and casual leave when calculating the number of weeks
    
    [[Page 6182]]
    
    per month actually worked. Petitioner states that the Department 
    calculated the hourly wage rate on the basis of 4.333 working weeks per 
    month, based on a full 52-week year, which assumes that workers never 
    get sick, take vacations or have other days off. Petitioner observes 
    that IL&T India shows that mandatory benefits include one day of paid 
    vacation for every 20 days worked, sick leave of seven days a year with 
    full pay, and seven to ten days of casual leave. Petitioner claims that 
    Respondents have not allocated any portion of vacation or sick leave to 
    the labor hours they reported as their factors of production. 
    Petitioner states that the goal is to determine the cost to an employer 
    of each hour that an employee is on the job and, therefore, the labor 
    hours used in the denominator of the surrogate labor-rate calculation 
    must include only time on the job. Petitioner suggests that the number 
    of weeks per month should be recalculated to take into account at least 
    the minimum benefits and derives a figure of 3.72 working weeks per 
    month using this approach.
        Guizhou Machinery et al. respond that the Department should reject 
    Petitioner's argument to adjust the calculated labor rate which the 
    Department used in the preliminary results for vacation, sick leave and 
    casual leave. Guizhou Machinery et al. claim that Petitioner provides 
    no support for the statement that hourly labor costs should reflect 
    only the expenses accrued to an employer for the time the employee is 
    on the job. Guizhou Machinery et al. state that the real hourly cost to 
    the employer reflects many factors, including fringe benefits such as 
    paid vacation, sick leave, etc. Guizhou Machinery et al. suggest that 
    the Department's calculations should include the cost of fringe 
    benefits such as vacation and sick leave in the numerator and, because 
    the numerator does include such fringe benefit costs, the denominator 
    should likewise reflect these fringe benefits by including hours 
    related to vacation and sick leave. .
    Department's Position
        We disagree with Petitioner. In our preliminary results we valued 
    direct labor using rates reported in IL&T India, which states that 
    fringe benefits normally add between 40 percent and 50 percent to base 
    pay. See Memorandum to the File from Case Analyst: Factors of 
    Production Values Used for the Eighth Antidumping Duty Administrative 
    Review (Memorandum), September 1, 1995, attachment 5. Accordingly, we 
    multiplied base pay by 1.45 in order to incorporate fringe benefits. 
    Memorandum at 3-4.
        Whereas Petitioner suggests we calculate a wage rate based only on 
    time spent on the job, we find that expenses related to holidays, 
    vacation, sick leave, etc., belong in the numerator of the surrogate 
    labor-rate calculation and time spent on vacation and sick leave 
    belongs in the denominator of the calculation. Because the employer 
    incurs expenses both for employees on vacation and employees on the 
    job, it incurs a fully loaded labor cost to produce the merchandise. By 
    adjusting the base pay to include such fringe benefits as vacation, 
    sick leave, casual leave, etc., we calculated a fully loaded direct-
    labor rate that more accurately represents the actual direct-labor cost 
    to the manufacturer. See TRBs VII at 49-50.
    
    2.(c)  Overhead, SG&A and Profit Valuation
    
    Comment 10
        Petitioner contends that the Department incorrectly designated the 
    line item ``power and fuel'' in the SKF Report as a material cost, not 
    an overhead cost, in its calculation of overhead expenses. Petitioner 
    argues that power and fuel are not materials incorporated into the 
    subject merchandise and Respondents did not report this expense as a 
    material factor or any other factor. Rather, Petitioner contends, 
    energy is generally used to operate the manufacturing plants and is 
    properly considered as part of factory overhead. For the final results, 
    Petitioner suggests that the Department include power and fuel costs in 
    SKF's overhead cost or calculate this expense as a separate factor but 
    notes that no purpose is served by isolating the energy costs as a 
    separate factor.
        East Sea argues that the statute does not specifically list ``power 
    and fuel'' as part of overhead, citing section 773(c)(3)(C) of the Act. 
    East Sea asserts, therefore, that the Department's inclusion of these 
    items within raw materials was not improper.
    Department's Position
        We agree with Petitioner that power and fuel are not direct 
    material inputs. Power and fuel consumption cannot be directly linked 
    to the output of the subject merchandise. Therefore, for these final 
    results, we have incorporated power and fuel as part of overhead.
    Comment 11
        Petitioner contends that the Department incorrectly designated the 
    line item ``stores and spares consumed'' in the SKF Report as a 
    material cost, not an overhead cost, in its calculation of overhead 
    expenses. Petitioner states that this line item concerns expenses 
    related to tools, grinding wheels, and spare parts used in the 
    production process or incorporated into the equipment and machinery, 
    but which are not incorporated into the finished product. Petitioner 
    argues that Respondents did not report ``stores and spares consumed'' 
    as part of the materials factor of production, which is proper because 
    this item is an overhead expense. Petitioner explains that ``stores and 
    spares'' are listed under ``expenses for manufacture,'' not under ``raw 
    materials'' in the SKF Report, and notes that the SKF Report refers to 
    ``stores and spares'' as tools.
        East Sea contends that the footnotes of the SKF Report state that 
    ``stores and spares consumed'' includes ``work-in-process.'' East Sea 
    states that it is unclear whether this line item relates to steel or 
    other types of materials and, given the lack of clarity, it would be 
    unfair to allocate all of this item to overhead. East Sea suggests 
    that, because this item relates to ``stores'' taken from inventory, it 
    is logical to classify this expense as non-overhead.
    Department's Position
        We agree with Petitioner. Because this line item involves expenses 
    relating to equipment and machinery used in the production process but 
    not incorporated into the finished product, we consider this expense as 
    part of overhead, even though the SKF Report does not describe the 
    nature of this line item entirely. Accordingly, for the final results, 
    we have treated ``stores and spares consumed'' as an overhead item.
    Comment 12
        Petitioner argues that the Department incorrectly designated the 
    line item ``traded goods'' in the SKF Report as a materials cost to be 
    included in the denominator of the calculation of the overhead, SG&A, 
    and profit rates. Petitioner states that ``traded goods'' are finished 
    products purchased and sold by SKF that have nothing to do with its 
    manufacturing operations. Petitioner notes that the SKF Report 
    segregates ``purchases of traded goods'' from ``raw materials and 
    bought out components consumed'' and, in a different part of the 
    report, separates them from products SKF ``manufactured and sold during 
    the year.'' Petitioner states further that the report identifies 
    ``purchases of traded goods'' as ``ball and roller bearings,'' 
    ``bearing accessories and maintenance products,'' and ``textile 
    machinery components.'' Petitioner notes that, in past reviews, the 
    Department included
    
    [[Page 6183]]
    
    only steel costs in the cost of materials, not finished products. 
    Petitioner states that this prior approach is correct and, because 
    purchases of traded goods are already manufactured and do not affect 
    production, the Department should exclude them from the overhead 
    denominator.
        East Sea responds that Petitioner's argument with regard to 
    ``traded goods'' is misguided and that the Department's calculations in 
    the preliminary results concerning this line item were correct.
    Department's Position
        We disagree with Petitioner. In past reviews we did not include a 
    line item for ``purchases of traded goods'' in the COM that we used as 
    the denominator of the overhead, SG&A, and profit-rate calculations 
    because the SKF reports that we used in those reviews did not include 
    this line item. In this review, the SKF Report includes a separate line 
    item for this cost. We have included it in the denominator of these 
    calculations (as part of the COM) because, in calculating SKF's COM, we 
    must include those line items listed on the SKF Report that reflect the 
    costs associated with the production of the merchandise that are not 
    overhead or SG&A expenses.
        According to the description in the SKF Report, ``purchases of 
    traded goods'' are properly considered as COM expenses. They are not 
    overhead or SG&A expenses but instead reflect the common practice of 
    manufacturers purchasing finished and semi-finished goods to meet their 
    clients'' demand. SKF does not incur direct materials or direct labor 
    expenses with respect to these products but instead incurs the expense 
    of purchasing them. Because these purchased goods are an integral 
    portion of cost of goods sold, they are ordinary business expenses that 
    we cannot ignore, as suggested by Petitioner, simply because they 
    involve products that SKF did not manufacture. Therefore, for the final 
    results, we have included ``purchases of traded goods'' as part of the 
    denominators we used in the overhead, SG&A, and profit-rate 
    calculations.
    Comment 13
        Petitioner states that the Department did not include interest 
    expenses SKF incurred in the constructed value (CV) calculations. 
    Petitioner recommends that the Department include these expenses in the 
    calculation of SG&A. Petitioner states that, according to the 
    Department's Antidumping Manual and Department practice, interest 
    expenses should be included in the CV.
        East Sea responds that, although Petitioner points to the 
    Antidumping Manual as support that SKF's interest expenses are SG&A 
    expenses, the interest expenses to which the manual refers are selling 
    expenses and there is no evidence that any of SKF's interest expenses 
    pertain to sales. Accordingly, East Sea asserts that the Department 
    should not include interest expenses in its CV calculations.
    Department's Position
        We agree with Petitioner that, consistent with our practice, the 
    interest expenses in question are ordinary business expenses relating 
    to SG&A. Therefore, we have included, in the SG&A expense for these 
    final results, interest expenses as reported in the SKF Report.
    Comment 14
        Petitioner states that, for the preliminary results, the Department 
    calculated profit on an after-tax basis. This methodology, Petitioner 
    contends, is contrary to the Department's policy to achieve an 
    ``apples-to-apples comparison'' (citing the Department's Antidumping 
    Manual). Petitioner states that, because the export prices and 
    constructed export prices used in the margin calculations include all 
    profits, i.e., are pre-tax values, the Department must calculate the 
    profit used in establishing NV on the same basis.
        East Sea responds that Petitioner cites no case law to support its 
    assertion and the Department should continue to calculate SKF's profit 
    net of expenses.
    Department's Position
        We agree with Petitioner that we should use a pre-tax amount to 
    calculate the profit ratio, for the reasons that Petitioner provided in 
    its comment. Therefore, for the final results, we have calculated a 
    profit rate for NV on a pre-tax basis.
    Comment 15
        East Sea argues that the Department improperly designated the line 
    item ``goodwill,'' as listed in the SKF Report, as an SG&A expense. 
    East Sea states that goodwill expenses are related to fixed assets and 
    are listed as such in the SKF Report. East Sea adds that there is no 
    Departmental precedent for including goodwill as part of SG&A and, 
    therefore, the Department should remove this expense from the SG&A 
    calculation.
        Petitioner responds that the fact that the SKF Report states that 
    these expenses are related to fixed assets is not a sufficient reason 
    to disregard them in calculating the SG&A expense. Petitioner states 
    that, using the same reasoning, the Department would have to eliminate 
    depreciation from the overhead expense, which would clearly be 
    incorrect. Petitioner adds that East Sea provided no evidence that SKF, 
    the surrogate producer, did not comply with Indian Generally Accepted 
    Accounting Principles (GAAP) or that its accounting practices should 
    otherwise be disregarded and the goodwill expense disallowed.
    Department's Position
        We agree with Petitioner that the fact that the SKF Report states 
    that the goodwill expense line item is related to fixed assets does not 
    render it a material cost. However, the evidence on the record does not 
    allow us to determine the extent to which SKF's goodwill expense is 
    attributable to overhead or SG&A. For these final results, we have 
    allocated 50 percent of SKF's goodwill expense to overhead and 50 
    percent to SG&A.
    Comment 16
        East Sea argues that the Department improperly designated the line 
    item ``rates and taxes'' in the SKF Report as an overhead expense 
    instead of including it in SG&A. East Sea states that this expense is 
    an SG&A expense because taxes are traditionally considered an 
    administrative expense, not a manufacturing expense.
        Petitioner responds that shifting allocations from overhead to SG&A 
    or vise versa should not affect the bottom line of the NV calculation. 
    Petitioner states, however, that it is more reasonable to assign the 
    ``rates and taxes'' line item to overhead because SKF is a 
    manufacturing company and, presumably, most of its rates and taxes 
    would relate to its plant and equipment and other aspects of its 
    manufacturing operations.
    Department's Position
        We agree with East Sea that we should allocate the ``rates and 
    taxes'' line item to SG&A and not to overhead. This allocation 
    methodology is consistent with our practice in previous administrative 
    reviews of this proceeding. See TRBs IV-VI at 65540.
    Comment 17
        East Sea contends that the Department should not include the line 
    item ``profit (loss) on fixed assets sold'' as part of overhead. East 
    Sea states that SKF incurred this expense independent of any 
    manufacturing or selling activities; rather, as its title suggests, it 
    is related to the value of fixed assets.
        Petitioner responds that selling fixed assets that were used in 
    manufacturing
    
    [[Page 6184]]
    
    is not a manufacturing activity, any more than an accounting entry to 
    reflect depreciation is a manufacturing activity. Petitioner contends, 
    however, that this line item does identify the relevant capital cost of 
    the assets used in manufacturing and therefore, as with depreciation, 
    the loss on the sale of fixed assets should be included in overhead.
    Department Position
        We agree with Petitioner that the loss SKF India incurred in 
    selling fixed assets used to manufacture merchandise clearly is related 
    to manufacturing activities. Therefore, we have included this loss as 
    an overhead item.
    Comment 18
        East Sea argues that the Department improperly allocated all of 
    SKF's line item ``repairs to buildings'' to overhead in the preliminary 
    results. East Sea suggests that Department allocate this item partially 
    to SG&A as there is no proof that repairs were made solely to 
    manufacturing buildings.
    Department's Position
        We agree with East Sea that it is improper to include all of SKF's 
    building-repair expenses in overhead because depreciation associated 
    with office buildings and office equipment should be included in SG&A. 
    Therefore, for the final results, we allocated repair costs to overhead 
    and SG&A according to the function and value of the assets; that is, we 
    included in overhead only the depreciation expenses allocated to 
    manufacturing. We obtained the information pertaining to the function 
    and value of SKF's assets from the SKF Report.
    Comment 19
        East Sea claims that the Department should allocate insurance to 
    both overhead and SG&A on a 75-percent/25-percent basis as there is no 
    proof that insurance costs are related to overhead alone.
        Petitioner contends that it does not make a difference in the CV 
    calculation whether the insurance is allocated to SG&A or overhead. 
    Petitioner adds, however, that SKF is a manufacturing company and most 
    of its insurance costs would relate to its plant and equipment and 
    similar items related to its manufacturing operations, i.e., overhead. 
    Petitioner also asserts that certain PRC companies have included 
    insurance as part of factory overhead. Moreover, Petitioner argues that 
    East Sea's recommended 75-percent/25-percent ratio is totally 
    arbitrary.
    Department's Position
        We agree with East Sea that we should allocate insurance expenses 
    to both overhead and SG&A. However, because East Sea did not provide 
    any support for the 75-percent/25-percent allocation ratio, we are not 
    using this ratio for the final results. Furthermore, even though, as 
    Petitioner notes, SKF India is a manufacturing company, we have no 
    information which will allow us to allocate insurance expenses 
    precisely. For the final results, we allocated insurance expenses 
    equally to SG&A and overhead (i.e., 50 percent to SG&A and 50 percent 
    to overhead), due to the fact that the SKF Report does not identify the 
    nature of these expenses.
    Comment 20
        East Sea contends that the Department should continue its past 
    practice of using an eight-percent profit rate for the final results. 
    East Sea emphasizes that SKF India is related to SKF Sweden and, 
    therefore, the transfer price and other related-party transactions 
    between parent and subsidiary could radically affect SKF's profit 
    margins.
        Petitioner argues that the former eight-percent rate was an 
    arbitrary rate and is contrary to the new law. Petitioner adds that 
    East Sea does not provide any evidence that such related-party 
    transactions actually occurred or that, if they occurred, they had any 
    actual impact upon SKF India's profits.
    Department's Position
        We agree with Petitioner. Consistent with section 773(c) of the 
    Act, we calculated a profit rate using surrogate data, in this case the 
    SKF Report. Regarding the appropriateness of this report for the profit 
    calculation, we note that East Sea did not provide any evidence to 
    support its claim that the profit rate is inappropriate because the 
    company had affiliated-party transactions.
    Comment 21
        Petitioner contends that the Department improperly accepted CMC's 
    claim that it incurred no U.S. selling expenses on constructed export 
    price sales made during the POR. Petitioner recommends that the 
    Department calculate these expenses on the basis of the facts available 
    and use the highest SG&A expense of any respondent in this review.
    Department's Position
        We disagree with Petitioner. We acknowledge that, aside from our 
    initial questionnaire, we did not pursue the issue of CMC's U.S. 
    selling expenses in either the supplemental questionnaire or by 
    conducting a verification of CMC's U.S. facility. Because we did not 
    provide CMC an opportunity to cure any perceived deficiency in its 
    response concerning such expenses and because we do not have 
    information on the record contradicting the information that CMC 
    provided, we have accepted this information for the final results.
    
    3. Freight
    
    Comment 22
        Petitioner claims that the Department calculated freight expenses 
    incorrectly by multiplying the surrogate freight rate by the net weight 
    of each bearing rather than by the gross weight of the bearing as 
    packaged for shipment. Petitioner states that a reasonable allowance 
    for the weight of packaging materials should be made in calculating 
    both ocean-freight and inland-freight rates, arguing that packaging 
    does not travel free of charge. Petitioner suggests that the Department 
    could use, as a PI source on the record for this review, a packing list 
    of CMC Guizhou, submitted by Distribution Services, Ltd. (DSL), on 
    September 27, 1995. Petitioner states that the packing list shows both 
    gross and net weights of pallets of several common TRB models and that 
    the average weight difference is about eight percent. Therefore, 
    Petitioner asserts, the Department should multiply the net weights by 
    1.08 to reflect the weight of packaging.
    Department's Position
        We agree with Petitioner that a cost is incurred with respect to 
    shipment of packing materials. Upon reviewing the packing list of CMC 
    Guizhou, we have determined that the packing document DSL submitted in 
    this review is an independent and reliable source for such information. 
    Accordingly, for the final results, we have derived the gross weight 
    used in calculating the ocean-freight expense by multiplying the net 
    weight by 1.08.
    Comment 23
        Petitioner states that the Department erroneously used the Indian 
    wholesale-price index (WPI) to adjust for inflation of ocean-freight 
    cost. Petitioner contends that, because the Department used the U.S. 
    dollar rates quoted by Maersk, Inc., a U.S. company, any adjustment for 
    inflation should be based on dollar inflation. Petitioner suggests that 
    the Department adjust ocean freight costs using the U.S. producer-price 
    index for finished goods, the U.S. equivalent of the Indian WPI.
    
    [[Page 6185]]
    
    Department's Position
        We agree with Petitioner that we should adjust ocean-freight costs 
    using the U.S. producer-price index because ocean-freight costs are 
    based on U.S. rates in U.S. dollars. For the final results, we deflated 
    the July 1996 ocean-freight-rate quotes from Maersk Inc. using the U.S. 
    WPI to reflect the POR costs.
    Comment 24
        Petitioner contends that the Department has understated the marine-
    insurance expense by applying an insurance rate per ton applicable to 
    sulfur dyes from India. Petitioner argues that insurance protects 
    against lost value and that, if a container of bearings were lost at 
    sea, there is no basis to suppose that payment for the loss of one ton 
    of sulfur dyes would have any relationship to the value of the 
    bearings. Petitioner adds that the Department's questionnaire indicates 
    that insurance premiums are normally based on the value of the 
    merchandise. Petitioner recommends that the Department calculate a 
    marine-insurance factor based on the ratio of the insurance charge per 
    ton of sulfur dye divided by the value of sulfur dye per ton (based on 
    U.S. Customs value) and apply this factor to the price of TRBs sold in 
    the United States.
        Guizhou Machinery et al. respond that it is not reasonable to 
    assume that the difference in Indian marine-insurance rates applicable 
    to sulfur dyes and TRBs can be measured accurately simply by comparing 
    the difference in product values. Guizhou Machinery et al. further 
    assert that Petitioner's argument is based on customs values obtained 
    from the Sulfur Dyes petition, information which has not been 
    previously submitted on the record for the current review. Guizhou 
    Machinery et al. state that the Department's approach of using the 
    marine-insurance rates from the sulfur-dyes investigation is consistent 
    with its calculations in other NME cases.
    Department's Position
        We disagree with Petitioner with respect to our use of the sulfur-
    dyes data. We have relied on the public information on marine insurance 
    for sulfur dyes that we used for the preliminary results, as these data 
    are the only public information available to us; further, we have used 
    the same rate repeatedly for other PRC analyses. See Final Results of 
    Administrative Review: Certain Helical Spring Lock Washers from the 
    PRC, 61 FR 41994 (August 13, 1996) (Lock Washers), and TRBs IV-VI at 
    65537.
    Comment 25
        Guizhou Machinery et al. claim that, with respect to Guizhou 
    Machinery and Guizhou Automotive, the Department did not convert the 
    charge for marine insurance from rupees into U.S. dollars and, 
    therefore, this expense is overstated. Guizhou Machinery and Guizhou 
    Automotive explain that the Department calculated marine insurance by 
    multiplying the rate per kilogram by the net weight of the bearing and 
    then adjusted for inflation, yielding a figure in rupees, which must be 
    converted into U.S. dollars in order to calculate a U.S. price. Guizhou 
    Machinery and Guizhou Automotive request that the Department convert 
    all marine-insurance rates in rupees to U.S. dollars.
        Additionally, Guizhou Machinery and Guizhou Automotive claim that 
    the Department calculated the foreign-inland-freight charge 
    incorrectly. Respondents explain that, for all other companies, the 
    Department calculated this charge properly but, for Guizhou Machinery 
    and Guizhou Automotive, the Department's formula resulted in an 
    inflated expense. Guizhou Machinery and Guizhou Automotive request that 
    the Department correct this error for the final results.
        Petitioner agrees that the Department should check its calculations 
    and ensure that amounts denominated in rupees are converted into 
    dollars and that it should apply the proper formula for inland freight.
    Department's Position
        We agree with both parties. For the final results, we have 
    corrected these errors.
    
    4. Facts Available
    
    Comment 26
        Petitioner disagrees with the Department's acceptance of Premier's 
    FOP data even though, in most cases, the data did not relate to the 
    manufacturer whose merchandise Premier sold to the United States. 
    Petitioner recommends the use of facts available to calculate Premier's 
    rate. Petitioner argues that there is no indication that Premier's 
    selective reporting is representative of its suppliers'' actual 
    experience, noting that the questionnaire states that, if a producer 
    uses more than one facility to produce subject merchandise, it must 
    report the factor use at each location. Petitioner asserts that the 
    Department's acceptance of Premier's selective responses, as well as 
    the use of other surrogate producers' costs when those of Premier's 
    suppliers were not available, is contrary to the Department's policy 
    regarding the appropriate deposit rate for unreviewed non-PRC exporters 
    of subject merchandise from the PRC. Petitioner states that Premier and 
    its suppliers should not be allowed to select the suppliers on the 
    basis of whose data the Department will calculate Premier's margin.
        Petitioner states that only Premier knows the efforts it made to 
    supply this information and, moreover, Premier's efforts are irrelevant 
    because the focus should be on the efforts Premier's suppliers made. 
    Petitioner contends that, since certain suppliers refused to come 
    forward and claim eligibility for a separate rate, the Department must 
    presume them to be part of the single entity to which the PRC rate 
    applies and, as non-responsive companies, they are subject to the use 
    of adverse facts available. Petitioner adds that all companies are 
    conditionally covered in this review and are subject to the PRC rate.
        Finally, Petitioner argues that the Department cannot justify its 
    approach on practical grounds. In this regard, Petitioner contends 
    that, although the Department states there is little variation in 
    factor-utilization rates among the TRB producers from whom it has FOP 
    data, the available data reflects only a small number of PRC producers 
    and the preliminary results show margins ranging from zero to 129.97 
    percent.
        Premier responds that, despite its repeated efforts to obtain FOP 
    data directly from its PRC-based suppliers, it was unsuccessful in 
    obtaining this data. Premier claims that it has been as responsive and 
    cooperative as possible with the Department in the course of this 
    review. Premier explains that, given this lack of supplier data for 
    certain U.S. sales, it analyzed the record to identify FOP data that 
    could be used in place of the data its suppliers had refused to supply, 
    and it submitted FOP data for models that constituted 94 percent of its 
    POR U.S. sales as follows: for 69 percent of its U.S. sales, Premier 
    provided FOP data for the supplier from whom Premier purchased the 
    merchandise; for 25 percent of its U.S. sales, Premier supplied data 
    from other Chinese producers. Premier states that, accordingly, it 
    could not locate any FOP data for only six percent of its U.S. POR 
    sales and the Department was correct to use Premier's U.S. sales and 
    FOP data when calculating Premier's dumping margin.
        Premier claims that it did not choose the production facility from 
    which to
    
    [[Page 6186]]
    
    obtain cost data selectively, stating that it linked its FOP reporting 
    to its suppliers if that supplier's data was on the record. Finally, 
    Premier states that Petitioner is incorrect in asserting that the real 
    focus should be on the PRC producers. Premier states that any PRC 
    producer who sells merchandise to trading companies without prior 
    knowledge that the merchandise is destined for the United States is not 
    subject to a separate dumping-margin calculation and by law cannot be 
    the focus for resolution of this issue.
    Department's Position
        We disagree with Petitioner. Premier responded to the best of its 
    ability to our requests for information regarding FOP data. Given the 
    level of cooperation evidenced by Premier in this review, including the 
    submission of responsive initial and supplemental questionnaire 
    responses as well as its participation in a complete verification of 
    its data, and the amount of usable information provided, Premier's 
    inability to provide certain FOP data does not warrant the use of 
    adverse facts available in calculating a margin in this case. Premier 
    provided enough information to allow us to calculate an accurate 
    margin, and we used our discretion appropriately to determine how to 
    apply facts available to account for the missing data. Accordingly, for 
    these final results, we are following our methodology from the 
    preliminary results.
        Premier was able to provide factors data from its suppliers for 
    models that represented most of Premier's sales by value. For those 
    U.S. sales for which Premier was unable to provide FOP data from its 
    own suppliers, it provided FOP data from other PRC suppliers of the 
    same models. For such merchandise, we determined that there is little 
    variation in factor-utilization rates among TRB producers from whom we 
    have received FOP data. Accordingly, we used such data for Premier for 
    U.S. sales of those models. For a small percentage of sales, Premier 
    was unable to report any FOP data. We determined that a simple average 
    of the calculated margins for other companies in this review is a 
    reasonable rate to apply, as facts available, for these sales by 
    Premier.
    
    5. Assessment
    
    Comment 27
        Transcom and L&S, domestic importers of subject merchandise, argue 
    that the Department's decision to apply what they consider to be 
    punitive facts-available appraisement and deposit rates to companies 
    that were never part of the review is unlawful. Transcom and L&S state 
    that, for this review, there were various companies from which they 
    purchased subject merchandise, none of which received a questionnaire 
    or was named in the notice of initiation of review. Transcom states 
    that entries from each of the unnamed companies were subject to 
    estimated antidumping duty deposits at the ``all others'' rate in 
    effect at the time of entry and argues that the Department is precluded 
    as a matter of law from either assessing final antidumping duties on 
    the unreviewed companies at any rate other than that at which estimated 
    antidumping duty deposits were made or imposing the new facts-
    available-based deposit rate on shipments from unreviewed companies.
        Transcom and L&S, citing section 751(a) of the Act, state that the 
    Department is directed to determine the amount of antidumping duties to 
    be imposed pursuant to periodic reviews. They add that, in accordance 
    with 19 CFR 353.22(e), unreviewed companies are subject to automatic 
    assessment of antidumping duties and a deposit of estimated duties at 
    the rate previously established. Transcom and L&S note that the Court 
    of International Trade (CIT) has concluded that, in situations where a 
    company's entries are not reviewed, the prior cash deposit rate from 
    the less-than-fair-value (LTFV) investigation becomes the assessment 
    rate, ``which must in turn become the new cash deposit rate for that 
    company'' (citing Federal Mogul Corp. v. United States, 822 F. Supp. 
    782, 787-88 (CIT 1993) (Federal Mogul II)). Transcom and L&S claim that 
    the CIT has affirmed this rationale in other, more recent, decisions as 
    well, concluding that the Department's use of a new ``all others'' rate 
    calculated during a particular administrative review as the new cash 
    deposit rate for unreviewed companies which have previously received 
    the ``all others'' rate is not in accordance with law (citing Federal 
    Mogul Corp. v. United States, 862 F. Supp. 384 (CIT 1994), and UCF 
    America, Inc. v. United States, 870 F. Supp. 1120, 1127-28 (CIT 1994) 
    (UCF America)).
        Based on these CIT decisions, Transcom contends that an exporter 
    that is not under review would have no reason to anticipate that 
    antidumping duties assessed on its merchandise would vary from the 
    amount deposited. Transcom notes that Federal Mogul II (at 788) states 
    that parties rely on the cash deposit rates in making their decision 
    whether to request an administrative review of certain merchandise. In 
    view of the Department's regulations, Transcom claims that the absence 
    of any notice from the Department that unnamed companies faced the 
    possibility of increased antidumping duty liability is fundamentally 
    prejudicial to the unnamed companies. Transcom states that previous 
    attempts by the Department to impose a rate based on the facts 
    available on an exporter neither named in the review request nor in the 
    notice of initiation have been overturned, citing Sigma Corp. v. United 
    States, 841 F. Supp. 1255 (CIT 1993) (Sigma Corp. I). In that case, 
    Transcom contends, the CIT held that the Department was required to 
    provide the company in question adequate notice to defend its interests 
    and, because it failed to do so, ordered the liquidation of entries of 
    merchandise exported by that company at the entered deposit rate.
        Transcom argues that the Department's statement that all exporters 
    of subject merchandise are ``conditionally covered by this review'' 
    (Initiation of Antidumping Duty Administrative Reviews and Request for 
    Revocation in Part (Initiation Notice), 59 FR 43537, 43539 (August 24, 
    1994)) is inadequate in that it fails to explain under what 
    ``conditions'' exporters are covered and whether such ``conditions'' 
    were met. If the statement is meant to include unconditionally all 
    unnamed exporters, Transcom asserts that it is contrary to the 
    regulatory requirement at 19 CFR 353.22(a)(1) that the review cover 
    ``specified individual producers or resellers covered by an order.'' 
    Because the importers in question were never served notice that they 
    were subject, conditionally or otherwise, to review, Transcom claims 
    that the Department is precluded from applying a punitive rate to the 
    company's exports.
        Transcom contends that, in accordance with section 776 of the Act, 
    the Department must have requested and been unable to obtain 
    information before applying adverse facts available. Transcom claims 
    that the Department may not resort to facts available ``because of an 
    alleged failure to provide further explanation when that additional 
    explanation was never requested'' (quoting Olympic Adhesives, Inc. v. 
    United States, 899 F.2d 1565, 1574 (1990); also citing Mitsui & Co., 
    Ltd. v. United States, 18 CIT 185 (March 11, 1994); Usinor Sacillor v. 
    United States, 872 F. Supp. 1000 (1994); and Sigma Corp. I at 1263). 
    Finally, Transcom argues that the facts-available-based PRC-wide rate 
    cannot be applied to exports by companies outside of China because 
    these companies are not PRC companies.
        L&S requests that the Department liquidate entries of the company's
    
    [[Page 6187]]
    
    imports from companies that were not specifically reviewed at the 
    entered rate rather than the punitive ``PRC-wide'' rate. L&S also 
    states that the prospective deposit rate for these unreviewed companies 
    should be 2.96 percent, which was the ``all others'' rate in the 
    initial investigation.
        Petitioner states that it is its intention that all exporters are 
    covered by this review and points out that the Department's notice of 
    initiation specified that all ``other exporters * * * are conditionally 
    covered.'' Therefore, Petitioner argues, all other suppliers of 
    Transcom not entitled to a separate rate should be expressly listed in 
    the final results as among those to which the ``PRC rate'' applies.
    
    Department's Position
    
        We disagree with Transcom and L&S. It is our policy to treat all 
    exporters of subject merchandise in NME countries as a single 
    government-controlled entity and assign that entity a single rate, 
    except for those exporters which demonstrate an absence of government 
    control, both in law and in fact, with respect to exports. Our 
    guidelines concerning the de jure and de facto separate-rates analyses, 
    as well as the company-specific separate-rates determinations, are 
    discussed in the Preliminary Results at 40611-12. We have determined 
    that companies in the government-controlled entity failed to respond to 
    our requests for information in this review and, accordingly, we have 
    established the rate applicable to such companies (the PRC rate) using 
    uncooperative facts available. As discussed below, the Act mandates 
    application of facts available for such companies because they are 
    subject to the review and they failed to cooperate by responding to our 
    requests for information.
        Pursuant to our NME policy, we presume that all PRC exporters or 
    producers that have not demonstrated that they are separate from PRC 
    government control belong to a single, state-controlled entity (the 
    ``PRC enterprise'') for which we must calculate a single rate (the 
    ``PRC rate'). The CIT has upheld our presumption of a single, state-
    controlled entity in NME cases. See UCF America, Inc. v. United States, 
    870 F. Supp. 1120, 1126 (CIT 1994), Sigma Corp I, and Tianjin Machinery 
    Import & Export Corp. v. United States, 806 F. Supp. 1008, 1013-15 (CIT 
    1992). Section 353.22(a) of our regulations allows interested parties 
    to request an administrative review of an antidumping duty order once a 
    year during the anniversary month. This regulation specifically states 
    that interested parties must list the ``specified individual 
    producers'' to be covered by the review. In the context of NME cases, 
    we interpret this regulation to mean that, if at least one named 
    producer or exporter does not qualify for a separate rate, the PRC 
    enterprise as a whole (i.e., all exporters that have not qualified for 
    a separate rate) is part of the review (this is analogous to our 
    practice in market-economy cases of including in reviews persons 
    affiliated to a company for which a review was requested). On the other 
    hand, if all named producers or exporters are entitled to separate 
    rates, there has been no request for a review of the PRC enterprise 
    and, therefore, the NME rate remains unchanged. Accord Federal-Mogul II 
    (``[i]n a situation where a company's entries are unreviewed, the prior 
    cash deposit rate from the LTFV investigation becomes the assessment 
    rate, which must in turn become the new cash deposit rate for that 
    company'').
        In this review, numerous companies named in the notice of 
    initiation did not respond to our questionnaires. We sent a letter to 
    the PRC embassy in Washington and to the Ministry of Foreign Trade and 
    Economic Cooperation (MOFTEC) in Beijing, requesting the identification 
    of TRB producers and manufacturers, as well as information on the 
    production of TRBs in the PRC and the sale of TRBs to the United 
    States. MOFTEC informed us that the China Chamber of Commerce for 
    Machinery and Electronics Products Import & Export (CCCME) was 
    responsible for coordinating the TRBs case. MOFTEC also said it 
    forwarded our letter and questionnaire to the CCCME. We also sent a 
    copy of our letter and the questionnaire directly to the CCCME, asking 
    that the questionnaire be transmitted to all companies in the PRC that 
    produced TRBs for export to the United States and to all companies that 
    exported TRBs to the United States during the POR.
        Because we did not receive information concerning many of the 
    companies named in the notice of initiation, we have presumed that 
    these companies are under government control. In accordance with our 
    NME policy, therefore, the government-controlled enterprise, which is 
    comprised of all exporters of subject merchandise that have not 
    demonstrated they are separate from PRC control, is part of this 
    review. Therefore, we must assign a review-specific ``PRC'' rate to 
    that enterprise. Because we did not receive responses from these 
    exporters, we have based the PRC rate on the facts available, pursuant 
    to section 776(c) of the Act. This rate will form the basis of 
    assessment for this review as well as the cash deposit rate for future 
    entries. In this regard, Transcom's reliance on Olympic Adhesives and 
    other cases is misplaced because the PRC entity to which we assigned 
    the review-specific PRC rate was requested to respond to our 
    questionnaire.
        We acknowledge a recent CIT decision cited by Transcom and by L&S, 
    UCF America Inc. v. United States, Slip Op. 96-42 (CIT Feb. 27, 1996), 
    in which the Court affirmed the Department's remand results for 
    reinstatement of the relevant cash deposit rate but expressed 
    disagreement with the PRC-rate methodology which formed the underlying 
    rationale for reinstatement. In UCF, the Court suggested that the 
    Department lacks authority for applying a PRC rate in lieu of an ``all 
    others'' rate. However, despite the concerns expressed by the Court, it 
    is our view that we have the authority to use the PRC rate in lieu of 
    an ``all others'' rate. See Hand Tools at 15221. Further, a subsequent 
    CIT decision accepted our application of a review-specific PRC rate to 
    non-responding PRC firms not individually named in the notice of 
    initiation. See Yue Pak, Ltd. v. United States, Slip Op. 96-65, at 66 
    (April 18, 1996).
        The PRC rate is consistent with the statute and regulations. As 
    discussed above, in NME cases, all producers and exporters which have 
    not demonstrated their independence are deemed to comprise a single 
    enterprise. Thus, we assign the PRC rate to the PRC enterprise just as 
    we may assign a single rate to a group of affiliated exporters or 
    producers operating in a market economy. Because the PRC rate is the 
    equivalent of a company-specific rate, it changes only when we review 
    the PRC enterprise. As noted above, all exporters or producers will 
    either qualify for a separate company-specific rate or will be part of 
    the PRC enterprise and receive the PRC rate. Consequently, whenever the 
    PRC enterprise has been investigated or reviewed, calculation of an 
    ``all others'' rate for PRC exporters is unnecessary.
        Thus, contrary to the argument by Transcom and L&S, the 
    Department's automatic-assessment regulation (19 CFR 353.22(e)) does 
    not apply to this review except in the case of companies that 
    demonstrate that they are separate from PRC government control and are 
    not part of this review. See Comment 2, above.
        We also disagree with the assertion by Transcom and L&S that 
    companies not
    
    [[Page 6188]]
    
    named in the initiation notice did not have an opportunity to defend 
    their interests by demonstrating their independence from the PRC 
    entity. Any company that believes it is entitled to a separate rate may 
    place evidence on the record supporting its claim. The companies 
    referenced by Transcom and L&S made no such showing, despite our 
    efforts to transmit the questionnaire to all PRC companies that produce 
    TRBs for export to the United States.
        Furthermore, Transcom's argument that the facts-available-based 
    PRC-wide rate cannot be applied to exports by companies outside of 
    China because these companies are not PRC companies is also unfounded. 
    Because these exporters' Chinese suppliers did not respond to the 
    Department's questionnaire, we were unable to determine, with respect 
    to sales by these exporters, whether the exporter or the Chinese 
    suppliers were the first sellers in the chain of distribution to know 
    that the merchandise they sold was destined for the United States. See 
    Yue Pak at 6. When resellers choose to use uncooperative suppliers that 
    are under an antidumping order, they must bear the consequences. See 
    Yue Pak at 16. Otherwise, uncooperative PRC exporters would be free to 
    hide behind and continue exporting through low-rate resellers in other 
    countries.
    
    6. Miscellaneous Issues
    
    Comment 28
        Guizhou Machinery et al. state that the Department identified 
    Xiangfan as ``Xiangfan International Trade Corporation'' in the 
    preliminary results, despite the fact the Xiangfan provided information 
    on the record indicating that its name had changed to ``Xiangfan 
    Machinery Foreign Trade Corporation, Hubei China.'' Guizhou Machinery 
    et al. request that the Department identify Xiangfan by this name for 
    the final results.
        Petitioner responds that this name change illustrates the ease with 
    which entities can make name changes and thereby circumvent the order. 
    Petitioner asks that the Department consider such evidence when making 
    its separate-rates determinations.
    Department's Position
        We agree with Guizhou Machinery et al. and have made this change 
    for the final results. This name change by a single company in this 
    review does not affect our separate-rates analysis (see our responses 
    to Comments 1 and 2).
    Comment 29
        Guizhou Machinery et al. request that the Department specifically 
    identify all branches of CMC that sold subject merchandise to the 
    United States during the POR. Respondents state that, although the 
    Department properly included sales made by CMC branches CMC Bali, CMC 
    Yantai, and Yantai CMC Bearing Company in its analysis of CMC, it did 
    not identify these exporters. Respondents state that such 
    identification is necessary in order to ensure that entries of 
    merchandise from these exporters receive the appropriate deposit and 
    assessment rates.
        Petitioner responds that the Department has not made an individual 
    separate-rate finding for each of these firms and, therefore, it should 
    deny Respondents' request.
    Department's Position
        We agree with Guizhou Machinery et al. We included all sales by the 
    above-named companies in our analysis of CMC in these final results and 
    our assessment and cash deposit rates reflect this analysis.
    
    Final Results of Review
    
        As a result of our analysis of the comments we received, we 
    determine the following weighted-average margins to exist for the 
    period June 1, 1994 through May 31, 1995:
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                     Margin 
                        Manufacturer/exporter                      (percent)
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Premier Bearing and Equipment, Limited.......................       2.76
    Guizhou Machinery Import and Export Corporation..............      17.65
    Luoyang Bearing Factory......................................       0.00
    Jilin Machinery Import and Export Corporation................      29.40
    Wafangdian Bearing Factory...................................      29.40
    Liaoning Co.; Ltd............................................       9.72
    China National Machinery Import and Export Corp..............       0.00
    China Nat'l Automotive Industry Import and Export Corp.......      25.66
    Tianshui Hailin Import and Export Corp.......................      24.17
    Zhejiang Machinery Import and Export Corp....................       2.75
    Xiangfan Machinery Foreign Trade Corporation, Hubei China....       0.00
    East Sea Bearing Co., Ltd....................................       3.23
    PRC Rate.....................................................      29.40
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The Department shall determine, and the Customs Service shall 
    assess, antidumping duties on all appropriate entries. Individual 
    differences between export price or constructed export price and NV may 
    vary from the percentages stated above. The Department will issue 
    appraisement instructions directly to the Customs Service.
        Furthermore, the following cash deposit requirements will be 
    effective upon publication of these final results for all shipments of 
    the subject merchandise entered, or withdrawn from warehouse, for 
    consumption on or after the publication date, as provided for by 
    section 751(a)(1) of the Act: (1) for the companies named above that 
    have separate rates and were reviewed (Premier, Guizhou Machinery, 
    Jilin, Luoyang, Liaoning, Tianshui, Zhejiang, CMC, China National 
    Automotive Industry Import and Export Guizhou, Xiangfan, East Sea, and 
    Wafangdian), the cash deposit rates will be the rates listed above; (2) 
    for Shandong, Wanxiang, and Great Wall, which we determine to be 
    entitled to separate rates, the rate will continue be that which 
    currently applies (8.83 percent); (3) for all remaining PRC exporters, 
    all of which were found not to be entitled to separate rates, the cash 
    deposit will be 29.40 percent; and (4) for other non-PRC exporters of 
    subject merchandise from the PRC, the cash deposit rate will be the 
    rate applicable to the PRC supplier of that exporter. These deposit 
    requirements shall remain in effect until publication of the final 
    results of the next administrative review.
        This notice serves as a reminder to importers of their 
    responsibility under 19 CFR 353.26 to file a certificate regarding the 
    reimbursement of antidumping duties prior to liquidation of the 
    relevant entries during this review period. Failure to comply with this 
    requirement could result in the Secretary's presumption that 
    reimbursement of antidumping duties occurred and the subsequent 
    assessment of double antidumping duties.
        This notice also serves as a reminder to parties subject to APOs of 
    their responsibility concerning disposition of proprietary information 
    disclosed under APO in accordance with 19 CFR 353.34(d). Timely written 
    notification of the return/destruction of APO materials or conversion 
    to judicial protective order is hereby requested. Failure to comply 
    with the regulations and the terms of an APO is a sanctionable 
    violation.
        This administrative review and notice are in accordance with 
    section 751(a)(1) of the Act (19 U.S.C. 1675(a)(1)) and 19 CFR 353.22.
    
        Dated: February 3, 1997.
    Robert S. LaRussa,
    Acting Assistant Secretary for Import Administration.
    [FR Doc. 97-3355 Filed 2-10-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 3510-DS-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
2/11/1997
Published:
02/11/1997
Department:
Commerce Department
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice of final results and partial termination of antidumping duty administrative review on tapered roller bearings and parts thereof, finished and unfinished, from the People's Republic of China.
Document Number:
97-3355
Dates:
February 11, 1997.
Pages:
6173-6188 (16 pages)
Docket Numbers:
A-570-601
PDF File:
97-3355.pdf