| Source: ActionAid International 8/08/2004  NGOs condemn US shrimp duties on Vietnam  ActionAid International, the Fund for Reconciliation and                     Development, and the Vietnam Fishery Association today warned                     that the US Department of Commerce's (DOC) preliminary dumping                     duty estimates for Vietnamese shrimp exports to the U.S. will                     have grave consequences to Vietnamese citizens who raise and                     market shrimp as well as to the overall national economy if                     they remain in place.  The groups strongly criticized the DOC duty levels as unjustified,                     and urged the U.S. government to re-examine its calculations                     in the final phase of the DOC investigation.  At the end of 2003, a group of domestic US shrimp producers                     petitioned the U.S. government to tax their competitors and                     consumers by placing duties on imported shrimp from Vietnam                     and five other countries. On July 6, the Commerce Department                     announced preliminary dumping margins on shrimp imports from                     Vietnam ranging from 12.11 percent to 93.13 percent.  "U.S. duties on shrimp will devastate Vietnam's economy                     and the country's ability to improve the lives of its people,"                     stated Dr. Ramesh Khadka, Country Director, ActionAid Vietnam.                     "With the encouragement of the United States, Vietnam's                     shrimp industry has been built on free market principles.                     The shrimp industry is a key component of Vietnam's economy,                     responsible for creating approximately 3.5 million jobs directly                     or indirectly in shrimp and shrimp related businesses. In                     addition, revenues from shrimp exports rank third among all                     the country's exports, trailing only crude oil and garments."  "Vietnam's shrimp industry is doing nothing illegal,"                     said Dr. Khadka.  "The country has a competitive advantage over US shrimpers                     because it usesmodern aquaculture technology and benefits from favourable                     natural conditions and low labour costs in farming shrimp.                     Vietnam produces a quality product that is in great demand                     in the United States. Moreover, growth industries like shrimp                     farming are absolutely vital to raising the overall level                     of economic development in Vietnam and other developing countries.                     Protectionist tariffs prevent countries like Vietnam from                     moving forward."
  "A recent survey conducted by ActionAid showed that                     shrimp farming accountsfor 50 percent of GDP in some provinces," Dr. Khadka                     continued.
  "More than 44 percent of peasant households in these                     regions derive their income from shrimp farming. Shrimp farmers                     obtain credit from banks by mortgaging assets and acquiring                     credit at standard interest rates. The industry receives no                     special treatment from the Vietnamese government. These duties                     will throw many Vietnamese, who have poured virtually all                     their assets into shrimping in the desire to improve their                     lives, back into poverty."  "Our survey also revealed that shrimp industry wages                     are generally higher than overall income levels in Vietnam                     and salaries at shrimp processing factories are significantly                     higher still," said Dr. Khadka. "Shrimp farmers                     and processors earn a decent wage in Vietnamese terms that                     allows them to support their families."  "If these dumping duties remain, millions of Vietnamese                     will suffer," he continued. "Forty-five percent                     of shrimp exports go to the U.S., making it Vietnam's largest                     market. ActionAid along with other humanitarian and international                     donor organizations has been working to better the lives of                     the Vietnamese people through fair market initiatives. Shrimp                     farming is more profitable and less physically rigorous than                     cultivating rice, which generates only one-third or less the                     income of shrimp for Vietnamese."  In 2003, the U.S. imposed dumping duties on Vietnamese catfish.                     The shrimptrade petition constitutes a far greater threat to Vietnam's                     economy; shrimp exports are worth approximately $500 million                     compared to the $10 million value of catfish exports, and                     the shrimp industry employs more than eight times as many                     workers as the approximately 400.000 people working in the                     catfish industry."
  According to Andrew Wells-Dang, regional representative                     of the Fund for Reconciliation and Development, the so-called                     "non-market" economy provisions of the US dumping                     laws resulted in Vietnam and China receiving different treatment                     than the other four countries in the shrimp case. "This                     treatment is evidence of the contradictions in U.S. trade                     policy. The United States and Vietnam have signed a bilateral                     trade agreement designed to encourage Vietnamese private sector                     development and exports, and yet the US duty determinations                     ignore real Vietnamese market conditions, resorting to numbers                     based on shrimp production in some unrelated 'surrogate' country."  "ActionAid calls on the United States government to                     ensure a fair investigation of Vietnam's shrimp industry,"                     concluded Dr. Khadka. "Based on our first hand observations,                     we are confident that, if a fair investigation is conducted,                     no dumping duties will be placed on Vietnam's shrimp exports."  ActionAid International is an international non-governmental                     organization working in 35 countries in the World. It started                     working in Vietnam in 1989 in the field of hunger eradication                     and poverty reduction. ActionAid International Vietnam contact:                     Dr Ramesh Khadka, rameshk@actionaidvietnam.org.  The Fund for Reconciliation and Development is an independent                     American non-profit organization that has worked for normal                     economic, diplomatic and cultural relations between the US                     and Indochina since 1985. The Fund for Reconciliation and                     Development contact: Andrew Wells-Dang, andrew@ffrd.org. 
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