S_statement(2011)-Final_version

S_statement(2011)-Final_version.pdf

Information collections for import injury investigations (producers, importers, purchasers, and foreign producer questionnaires and institution notices for 5-year reviews)

OMB: 3117-0016

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Questionnaires Issued for Import Investigations and
Institution Notices for Five-Year Sunset Reviews
As part of the import injury investigations conducted under a series of statutes (antidumping,
countervailing duty, escape clause, NAFTA safeguard, market disruption, and interference-withprograms-of-the USDA), the U.S. International Trade Commission (Commission) issues a series of
questionnaires to firms participating in U.S. industrial and agricultural industries.1 In addition, for certain
investigations (namely, the five-year sunset reviews of antidumping and countervailing duty orders and
suspended investigations), the Commission publishes institution notices in the Federal Register that
constitute an information collection as defined by the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995. This supporting
statement is for an extension, or renewal, of the current Commission “generic clearance” from the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB)2 to issue information collections for import injury investigations.
Generic questionnaires--Sample or “generic” questionnaires (U.S. producers’, U.S. importers’, U.S.
purchasers’, foreign producers’, and related instructions) used for original import injury investigations are
attached to this submission as are a similar set of questionnaires intended for use in the five-year sunset
reviews. The questionnaires are available to the public on the Commission’s website (at:
http://www.usitc.gov/trade_remedy/731_ad_701_cvd/investigations/question/index.htm). The sample
questionnaires are designed to illustrate the different types of data that the Commission usually seeks in
its investigations and are representative of the average burden placed on questionnaire respondents. In
most investigations, the data requested will closely resemble that shown in the sample questionnaires.
The Commission will continue, in most circumstances, to request only three full years and two partial
years of data in original antidumping and countervailing duty investigations. Somewhat more data
typically is requested in the infrequent escape clause investigations (i.e., usually five years of data). Also,
additional periods of data are frequently requested in five-year sunset reviews of the outstanding orders to
ensure that the Commission can consider the full period from the time of the original investigation or
previous review to the current period.
Federal Register notice--Included within this information clearance package is a sample notice for the
Commission’s institution of five-year sunset reviews. The notice includes specific requests for
information that firms are to provide if their response is to be considered by the Commission in makings
its determination as to whether to conduct an expedited or full review.

1

It is understood that the Commission’s generic clearance to issue questionnaires will not apply to repetitive
questionnaires such as those issued on a quarterly or annual basis. In addition, it will not apply to other
investigations and research studies conducted under section 332 of the Trade Act of 1974. These investigations are
differentiated from those included under the generic clearance in that they do not require an injury determination.
2
OMB No. 3117-0016, expiration date of June 30, 2011. The Commission has issued questionnaires for its import
injury investigations under a generic clearance since 1980.

1

Part A. Justification
(1) Request.--The information requested in the questionnaires and five-year sunset review institution
notices is for use by the Commission in connection with the following statutory investigations:3
Investigation name

Statute

(A) Antidumping

Sections 731-739, 751, 752, 761, and 762 of the Tariff Act of
1930, as amended (19 U.S.C. §§ 1673-1673h, 1675, 1675a,
1676, and 1676a)

(B) Countervailing duty

Sections 701-709, 751, 752, 753, 761, and 762 of the Tariff Act
of 1930, as amended (19 U.S.C. §§ 1671-1671g, 1675, 1675a,
1675b, 1676, and 1676a)

(C) Escape clause

Sections 201-204 and the Trade Act of 1974, as amended (19
U.S.C. §§ 2251-2254)

(D) NAFTA safeguard

Sections 301-317 of the North American Free Trade Agreement
Implementation Act (19 U.S.C. §§ 3351-3358, 3371, 3372, and
3381)

(E) Market disruption

Sections 406 and 421 of the Trade Act of 1974, as amended (19
U.S.C. § 2436 and19 U.S.C. § 2451)

(F) Interference with
programs of the USDA

Section 22 of the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1933, as
amended (7 U.S.C. § 624)

The Commission conducts antidumping and countervailing duty investigations under provisions of Title
VII of the Tariff Act of 1930 to determine whether domestic industries are being materially injured or
threatened with material injury by reason of imports of products which are sold at less than fair value
(antidumping cases) or subsidized (countervailing duty cases). Five-year sunset reviews of antidumping
and countervailing duty orders and of suspended investigations are conducted to determine whether
revocation of the existing orders would be likely to lead to continuation or recurrence of material injury to
3

A full text copy of the Tariff Act of 1930 and the Trade Act of 1974 was included in the clearance request made
on April 16, 1980. A copy of Section 22 of the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1921 was included with the May 15,
1981 submission. The Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988 (Public Law 100-418, 102 STAT 1107)
amends portions of both the Tariff Act of 1930 and the Trade Act of 1974; a copy was included with the July 31,
1990 submission. A copy of sections 301-317 of the North American Free Trade Agreement Implementation Act
was included with the May 3, 1996 clearance request. See also the summary of statutory provisions providing for
antidumping and countervailing duty investigations on the Commission’s website (at:
http://www.usitc.gov/trade_remedy/731_ad_701_cvd/index.htm) and a summary of statutory provisions providing
for global and special safeguard investigations (at: http://www.usitc.gov/trade_remedy/safeguards/index.htm).
The Commission’s regulations concerning the conduct of import injury investigation are found in 19 CFR,
subchapters A and B of Chapter II, which is also posted on the website (at:
http://www.usitc.gov/secretary/fed_reg_notices/rules/index.htm).

2

the domestic industry. The Commission conducts escape-clause investigations to determine whether
increased imports are a substantial cause of serious injury or threat of serious injury to a domestic
industry. NAFTA safeguard investigations are conducted under the authority of the North American Free
Trade Agreement and examine whether increased imports from Canada or Mexico are a substantial cause
of serious injury or threat of serious injury to a domestic industry. Market disruption investigations under
section 406 of the Trade Act of 1974 are conducted to determine whether imports of an article produced
in a Communist country are causing material injury to a domestic industry. In China safeguard
investigations under section 421 of the Trade Act of 1974, the Commission determines whether a product
from China is being imported into the United States in such increased quantities or under such conditions
as to cause or threaten to cause market disruption to the domestic producers of like or directly competitive
products. The Commission also conducts investigations to determine whether imports are interfering with
programs of the Department of Agriculture for agricultural commodities or products.
The Commission’s statutory authority for obtaining data by questionnaire is set forth in section 333(a) of
the Tariff Act of 1930.

(2) Purpose.--The information collected through questionnaires issued under the generic clearance for
import injury investigations is consolidated by Commission staff and presented to the Commission in the
form of a staff report. The information provided by firms in response to the questionnaires further
constitutes a major portion of the statistical base used by the Commission in making its determinations.
In addition, in the majority of its investigations, the Commission releases completed questionnaires
returned by industry participants to representatives of interested parties to its investigations under the
terms of an administrative protective order, the terms of which safeguard the confidentiality of any
business proprietary or business confidential information. Representatives of interested parties4 also
receive a confidential version of the staff report under the administrative protective order. Subsequent
party submissions to the Commission for specific proceedings are based, in large part, upon their review
of the information collected by the Commission.
The submissions made to the Commission in response to the notices of institution of five-year sunset
reviews are evaluated to determine if they meet the criteria for adequacy. If the Commission concludes
that interested parties’ responses to the notice of institution are adequate, or otherwise determines that a
full review should proceed, investigative activities pertaining to that review will continue. Alternatively,
if the Commission concludes that interested parties’ responses to the notice of institution are inadequate,
it may decide to conduct an expedited review, which does not require gathering data using
questionnaires.5

4

Interested parties consist of U.S. producers within the industry in question as well as labor unions or
representative groups of workers, U.S. importers and foreign exporters, and involved foreign country governments.
5

The institution notices state that: "{p}ursuant to section 207.61(c) of the Commission's rules, any interested party
that cannot furnish the information requested by this notice in the requested form and manner shall notify the
Commission at the earliest possible time, provide a full explanation of why it cannot provide the requested
information, and indicate alternative forms in which it can provide equivalent information. If an interested party
does not provide this notification (or the Commission finds the explanation provided in the notification inadequate)
and fails to provide a complete response to this notice, the Commission may take an adverse inference against the
party pursuant to section 776(b) of the Act in making its determination in the review."

3

Depending upon the specific type of investigation, the Commission is required to notify either the
Department of Commerce or the President, in addition to the petitioner and other parties, of its
determination and the relevant facts. Affirmative Commission determinations in antidumping and
countervailing duty investigations result in the imposition of additional duties on imports entering the
United States. If the Commission makes an affirmative determination in a five-year sunset review, the
existing antidumping or countervailing duty order will remain in place. The data developed in escapeclause, market disruption, and interference-with-USDA-program investigations (if the Commission finds
affirmatively) are used by the President/U.S. Trade Representative to determine the type of relief, if any,
to be provided to domestic industries.
The following tabulation provides the number of import injury investigations (where the Commission
makes determinations on the basis of questionnaires issued under the current generic clearance) instituted
at the Commission during 2008-10:
Type of investigation

2008

Antidumping

2009

2010

20

21

3

Countervailing duty

6

15

2

Title VII changed circumstances review (751b)

0

0

0

14

21

35

Global safeguard review (203/204)

0

0

0

China safeguard (421)

0

1

0

Title VII five-year (751c)1

1

Does not include five-year reviews that were revoked by the International Trade Administration
(U.S. Department of Commerce) and where the Commission subsequently terminated its reviews.
Five-year reviews that were expedited by the Commission do not require that questionnaires be
issued. Submissions were, however, provided to the Commission in response to its notices of
institution of five-year sunset reviews .
Note.–Data for antidumping and countervailing duty investigations are provided on a fiscal year
basis; the remaining data are provided on a calendar year basis. Further, the numbers of cases
provided refer to individual filings for each statute and country (and not to the number of grouped
filings for statutes and countries combined).
Source: Import Injury Investigations Case Statistics (FY 1980-2008), January 2009 and case
data retrieved from U. S. International Trade Commission website at
http://www.usitc.gov/trade_remedy/731_ad_701_cvd/investigations/completed/index.htm.

(3) Information technology.--The Commission’s collection of information under the generic clearance
historically has not involved the use of automated, electronic, mechanical, or other technological
collection techniques or other forms of information technology. Completed questionnaires have typically
been returned by recipients to the Commission in paper form or as a FAX. The Commission has,
however, continued to move forward with a number of procedural changes in how it collects information
to make it easier for firms to respond electronically, which both simplifies firm recording of data onto
forms and minimizes data entry error at the Commission.
Questionnaires in paper form continue to be sent via overnight delivery services to the relevant firms;
however, the Commission is increasing the number of questionnaires sent to firms via email. To assist

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firms in preparing their questionnaire responses, the Commission now regularly prepares the
questionnaires as a “fillable” form in MS Word format. Questionnaires in MS Word (and as a PDF) for
specific investigations are made available on the Commission’s website (see the entries for each
investigation at the Commission’s website at:
http://www.usitc.gov/trade_remedy/731_ad_701_cvd/investigations/active/index.htm); the investigationspecific link is provided in the instruction booklet accompanying the mailed questionnaires. Responding
firms may continue to mail, FAX, or email their completed questionnaires to the Commission.6 7 The
Commission continually assesses ways to improve the data collection process for efficiencies and to
reduce the burden on responding firms. For example, the Commission has recently introduced an
electronic method for submitting questionnaires where firms can now securely upload completed
questionnaires to a secure dropbox on the Commission’s website.8 This should make filing easier and
more cost effective for firms and will likely result in a reduction in paper. Finally, parties to the
investigation must, where service of the questionnaire is required, provide the service in paper form to the
other parties under the administrative protective order (see 19 CFR § 207.7).9
Information provided by firms in response to its notices of institution for the five-year sunset reviews are
submitted in document form directly to the Commission’s Office of the Secretary.
(4) Non-duplication.--The Commission contacts trade associations, government agencies, and other
industry participants prior to developing a questionnaire in order to determine the amount and type of data
already available and to avoid duplication. Public data that the Commission has been able to utilize on a
regular basis consist primarily of the quantity and value of imports into the United States maintained by
the U.S. Department of Commerce; some use has also been made of U.S. Department of Agriculture
statistics for cases involving agricultural commodities and data maintained by the American Iron and
Steel Institute for steel investigations.
However, the Commission can rarely rely solely upon existing data sources. For each investigation it
conducts, the Commission generally is restricted to examining a relatively narrow group or range of
products in assessing injury, or threat of injury, to a specific domestic industry. In most cases, the
product categories of published data are too broad and/or do not correspond to the product(s) under
investigation. It is also necessary for the Commission to ensure that for such items as shipments and
pricing, the data it considers is collected using the same measurement criteria for producers (both
domestic and foreign), importers, and purchasers. Timeliness is also of concern. For example, the
Commission usually examines data for the most recent three full years and two partial years in
antidumping and countervailing duty investigations, ending with the last quarter for which firms have
closed their books. Finally, to ensure that its determinations are made using the most accurate data

6

Firms are cautioned in the instruction booklet that the use of e-mail may subject their business proprietary
information to transmission over an unsecured environment and to possible disclosure.
7

Questionnaires submitted to the Commission as a compact disc or through e-mail must contain a scanned PDF of
the signed certification by an authorized official of the firm that the data in the questionnaire are complete and
accurate.
8

Firms are given the specific web address and a case-specific password in the instruction booklet for the secure
dropbox. (See for example:
http://www.usitc.gov/trade_remedy/731_ad_701_cvd/investigations/2011/galvanized_steel_wire/prelimphase.htm,
Instruction booklet at p. 4).
9

A signed certificate of service must accompany the documents.

5

possible, the Commission where possible reviews information on the individual operations of the firms
within an industry (data not available on a public basis).

(5) Small businesses.--The Commission generally directs its data collection activities towards those
firms that account for a significant percentage of the total trade of the products under investigation. Such
firms are the larger businesses in the industry under investigation, but may be classified as “small
businesses” under the rules of the Small Business Administration. The burden is minimized for any
“smaller” firms included on a Commission mailing list since, in contrast to the “larger” firms, they will
generally only produce, import, or purchase some of the products under investigation and thus, by
definition, need only complete part of the questionnaire. In addition, the Commission’s staff generally
contacts questionnaire recipients to assist them in completing their response. Firms for which the
questionnaire is particularly burdensome may receive additional time to complete the questionnaire and/or
be encouraged to use estimates. (The instructions of each questionnaire provide the names and telephone
numbers of Commission staff assigned to the investigation; they also state that carefully prepared
estimates are acceptable.) Also, a firm (especially if small in size) whose operations upon examination
appear to be of lesser relevance to the investigation may be exempted from completing all or a portion of
the questionnaire.

(6) Consequence of non-collection.--As discussed above, the Commission would be severely hampered
in making its determinations and recommendations if the information collections are not conducted.
The actual questions formulated for use in a specific investigation depend upon such factors as the nature
of the industry, the relevant issues, the ability of respondents to supply the data, and the availability of
data from secondary sources. However, the issues to be examined are largely determined by statutory
mandate. The Tariff Act of 1930 identifies certain economic factors that the Commission is to take into
account in arriving at determinations in countervailing duty and antidumping investigations. Section
771(7) of the Act directs the Commission to evaluate, in addition to any other relevant economic factors,
the following: import volumes, prices, production, shipments, profitability, productivity, inventories,
employment, wages, growth, ability to raise capital, and investment. The Commission is also provided
with guidelines concerning the economic factors it is to take into account in making its determinations in
escape clause investigations. Section 202(c)(1) of the Trade Act of 1974 directs the Commission to take
into account all relevant economic factors, but specifically mentions the following: capacity utilization;
profitability; unemployment; underemployment; sales; inventories; production; wages; import levels, both
relative to production and absolute; and the proportion of the domestic market supplied by domestic
producers. The Commission may also be required to examine injury to both national and regional
industries in antidumping and countervailing duty investigations. In some investigations, questionnaires
will solicit data pertaining to other economic factors not listed in the statutes (e.g., channels of
distribution and lost sales) because such data have been found to be particularly useful in past
Commission determinations or are relevant to the case in question.

(7) Special circumstances.--Except as noted below, there are no special circumstances that would cause
a questionnaire under the generic clearance to be issued in a manner inconsistent with item 7 of the
“Specific Instructions for the Supporting Statement.”

6

The Commission cannot always allow respondents 30 days to prepare a written response to an
information collection. Some of the questionnaires issued under the generic clearance are for the
preliminary phases of antidumping and countervailing duty investigations that have statutory deadlines of
45 days. For these investigations it is necessary that the data be returned to the Commission in time for
the staff to compile it and prepare a final staff report by about day 39. On day 45, the Commission
submits its determination to the Secretary of Commerce. For all other types of investigations, the
Commission attempts to provide respondents 30 days or more to respond to its questionnaires.
Extensions of the Commission’s questionnaire deadlines frequently are provided upon request.

(8) Consultations.--The Commission’s notice soliciting comments on the proposed information
collection (for the generic clearance) prior to submitting it to OMB was published in the Federal Register
on March 1, 2011 (76 FR 11264; copy provided), as required by 5 CFR § 1320.8(d).10
Consultations applying to questionnaire content.--The generic questionnaires included with this
submission provide, as indicated above, an indication of the types of data collected in import injury
investigations. The documents in electronic form also function as clerical aid to prevent having to
replicate substantial portions of the questionnaires issued in actual investigations. Questionnaires for
newly instituted investigations (including the preliminary phases of antidumping and countervailing duty
investigations) are structured, in part, using information provided in the petition submitted by the
petitioning firms. For every individual investigation, industry representatives are solicited by
Commission staff for their input and comments regarding the specific questionnaires that will be issued.
Further, the Commission has formalized the process where interested parties comment on data collection
and draft questionnaires in final phase antidumping and countervailing duty investigations (including the
five-year sunset reviews). Interested parties are provided approximately two weeks to provide comments
to the Commission on the draft questionnaires. Requests by parties to expand the data collection or add
items to the questionnaire may not be accepted if the Commission believes such requests will increase the
response burden while not substantially adding to the investigative record. After the comment period,
each individual Commissioner reviews and approves the questionnaires through the Commission’s
“action jacket” procedure (in final phase original investigations and five-year sunset reviews).
With respect to the institution notices and questionnaires issued for the five-year sunset reviews of
antidumping and countervailing duty orders and suspended investigations, the Commission has attempted
to minimize the amount of information it collects from the industries involved in the reviews while still
meeting its statutory obligations.11
Consultations applying to questionnaire burden.–The Commission requests in every questionnaire issued
under the generic clearance that firms report the actual number of hours required and the cost incurred in
preparing the reply to the questionnaire and in completing the form. Responses from firms are tabulated
by the Commission and provide the basis for the burden estimates and costs incorporated into this
extension request.

10

In addition, the text of the 30-day Federal Register notice that will be published is also incorporated into this
submission.
11

For example, to minimize burden, the Commission decided not to collect projected data (except for the capacity
to produce by foreign manufacturers) in the five-year sunset reviews and placed great emphasis on gathering
information from firms in narrative form, rather than collecting quantitative data in responses to its institution
notices.

7

Comments received.-- The Commission did not receive any comments from individual firms that have
completed questionnaires in import injury investigations nor did it receive any comments from counsel
that has represented interested parties (that have completed questionnaires).
(9) Payments or gifts to respondents.--There is no provision for any payment or gifts to respondents.

(10) Confidentiality.--The authority for accepting submissions of information as confidential is specified
in 19 CFR 201.6. The respondents are informed in the instruction booklet accompanying the mailed
questionnaires that:
“The commercial and financial data furnished in response to the enclosed questionnaire(s) that reveal the individual
operations of your firm will be treated as confidential by the Commission to the extent that such data are not
otherwise available to the public and will not be disclosed except as may be required by law (see 19 U.S.C. § 1677f).
Such confidential information will not be published in a manner that will reveal the individual operations of your
firm; however nonnumerical characterizations of numerical business proprietary information (such as discussions of
trends) will be treated as confidential business information only at the request of the submitter for good cause
shown”.

The following information describing the administrative protective order service requirement and
providing certain information to the Department of Commerce is also provided to respondents in the
instruction booklet:
“The information provided by your firm in response to the questionnaire(s), as well as any other
business proprietary information submitted by your firm to the Commission in connection with the
investigation, may become subject to, and released under, the administrative protective order
provisions of the Tariff Act of 1930 (19 U.S.C. § 1677f) and section 207.7 of the Commission’s
Rules of Practice and Procedure (19 CFR § 207.7). This means that certain lawyers and other
authorized individuals may temporarily be given access to the information for use in connection
with this investigation or other import-injury investigations or reviews conducted by the
Commission on the same or similar merchandise; those individuals would be subject to severe
penalties if the information were divulged to unauthorized individuals. In addition, if your firm is
a U.S. producer, the information you provide on your production and imports and your responses
to the questions in Part I of the producer questionnaire will be provided to the U.S. Department of
Commerce, upon its request, for use in connection with (and only in connection with) its
requirement pursuant to sections 702(c)(4) and/or 732(c)(4) of the Act (19 U.S.C. § 1671a(c)(4)
and/or /1673a(c)(4)) to make a determination concerning the extent of industry support for the
petition requesting this investigation. Any information provided to Commerce will be transmitted
under the confidentiality and release guidelines set forth above. Your response to these questions
constitutes your consent that such information be provided to Commerce under the conditions
described above”.

As indicated above, the administrative protective order service requirement constitutes a third-party
disclosure (i.e., a directive for a person to disclose information to other persons) under the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995. The “authorized applicants,” or those who are eligible to receive business
propriety information under the administrative protective order, are limited to persons (primarily trade
attorneys and the economic consultants hired by those attorneys) who represent interested parties in a
specific import injury investigation. As described earlier, party briefs and other submissions to the
Commission are based in large part upon information released to these authorized applicants under the
terms of the administrative protective order.

8

The administrative protective order service requirement also applies to and is described in the notices of
institution for five-year sunset reviews.
(11) Sensitive information.--Information on issues of a sensitive nature involving persons is not sought.
(12) Estimates of burden (July 2011 through June 2014).12--The Commission estimates that
information collections issued under the requested generic clearance will impose an average annual
burden of 186,002 burden hours on 4,221 respondents (i.e., recipients that provide a response to the
Commission’s questionnaires or the notices of institution of five-year sunset reviews). Table 1 lists the
projected annual burden for each type of information collection for the period July 2011 through June
2014.
Table 1
Projected annual burden data, by type of information collection, July 2011-June 2014

Item

Producer
questionnaires1

Purchaser
questionnaires3

Importer
questionnaires2

Foreign
producer
questionnaires4

Institution
notices
for 5-year
reviews5

Total

Number of respondents

751

1,279

988

1,119

84

4,221

Frequency of response

1

1

1

1

1

1

Total annual responses

751

1,279

988

1,119

84

4,221

Hours per response

71.5

40.1

35.1

40.6

10.9

44.1

Total hours

53,672

51,292

34,678

45,443

917

186,002

12

A July-June period is used since the current generic clearance expires on June 30, 2011.

9

1

Producer questionnaires.--Estimates based upon the following variables: number of respondents (anticipated
caseload (x) number of producer respondents per case) and hours per response (responding firm burden adjusted
upward for supplemental requests plus outside review burden and third-party disclosure burden for questionnaires
submitted by interested parties)
2
Importer questionnaires.--Estimates based upon the following variables: number of respondents (anticipated
caseload (x) number of importer respondents per case) and hours per response (responding firm burden adjusted
upward for supplemental requests plus outside review burden and third-party disclosure burden for questionnaires
submitted by interested parties).
3
Purchaser questionnaires.--Estimates based upon the following variables: number of respondents (anticipated
caseload (x) number of purchaser respondents per case) and hours per response (responding firm burden
adjusted upward for supplemental requests).
4

Foreign producer questionnaires.--Estimates based upon the following variables: number of respondents
(anticipated caseload (x) number of foreign producer respondents per case) and hours per response (responding
firm burden adjusted upward for supplemental requests plus outside review burden and third-party disclosure
burden for questionnaires submitted by interested parties).
5

Institution notices for 5-year reviews.--Estimates based upon the following variables: anticipated five-year
review caseload, number of respondents to each notice, and responding firm burden.
Note.--Above estimates include questionnaires for specific investigations where the mailing list consists of fewer
than 10 firms. In such instances the majority or all firms within the industry under investigation may be said to
receive questionnaires. According to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, “(a)ny collection of information
addressed to all or a substantial majority of an industry is presumed to involved ten or more persons.”
Definitions on the next page.

10

DEFINITIONS
Anticipated caseload.--Derived from current Commission budget estimates.
Number of respondents per case.--Defined as the number of firms which return completed questionnaires to the
Commission. Current estimates of “number of respondents per case” for the questionnaires were derived from the
number of respondents to Commission questionnaires that were issued under the current generic clearance except
for the estimated number of producers which was calculated from data from the current and previous generic
clearance. As shown in note 1 to table 2, the number of responding producers per investigation were fewer during
the current clearance period than the number responding for the previous period. To minimize the impact of
random variation, the numbers for the two clearance periods were averaged.
Responding firm burden.--Defined as the time required by the firm that received the questionnaire to review
instructions, search data sources, and complete and review its response. Commission questionnaires do not
impose the burden of developing, acquiring, installing and utilizing technology and systems, nor require adjusting
existing methodology or training personnel. Current estimates of “responding firm burden” for the questionnaires
were derived from the actual burden reported by firms that responded to Commission questionnaires issued under
the current and previous generic clearance periods.
Outside review burden.--Time devoted by outside legal and economic advisors to reviewing questionnaires
completed by the responding firms who are their clients prior to submitting them to the Commission. The number
of questionnaires to be reviewed is based on the share of total responding firms during the period covered by the
previous generic clearance that were interested parties (22 percent). The time per questionnaire is estimated
based upon the review experience of Commission staff, which ranges from 2 to 4 hours per questionnaire but not,
as discussed earlier, including time required by Commission staff to prepare and review follow-up requests.
Third-party disclosure burden.--Time required for outside legal advisors to serve their clients’ questionnaires on
other parties to the investigation or review under an administrative protective order. The number of questionnaires
to be served is based on the share of total responding firms during the period covered by the current generic
clearance that were interested parties.

Variation in estimated burden.--The hourly burden estimates presented above can be expected to vary
widely among individual respondents from one hour to several times the reported average burden. The
reasons for the variation are as follows: (1) depending on the time of year a petition is filed or order is to
be reviewed the Commission may or may not examine partial year data; (2) questionnaires for the original
investigations generally examine three years of data (plus partial periods if applicable) while
questionnaires for the five-year sunset reviews typically examine data from the time of the original
investigation or last review to the present; (3) a respondent may only produce, import, or purchase the
products during a short time period or handle only one of the products under investigation or reviewed;
(4) the time required to extract the data from existing records will vary depending both on the product
subject to investigation (and the likelihood that certain data are already aggregated for that product) as
well as on variations in firm-specific record systems; (5) whether the firm’s operations are centralized or
spread among various locations; and (6) the questionnaires include the maximum number of reporting
categories to ensure that meaningful data will be obtained from firms with complex business operations
meaning that some sections of the questionnaires will not apply to smaller-sized firms.
Table 2 presents the range in reported variance (aggregated for an entire investigation and by individual
respondents) for various types of Commission questionnaires issued under the current generic clearance:

11

Table 2
Reported variance in reported burden hours, by type of information collection, July 2008-April 2011
Type of
investigation

Type of questionnaire
Domestic
producer 1

Importer 2

Purchaser 3

Foreign producer 4

Average reported burden hours
Preliminary

36-281

22-138

(5)

10-44

Final (including 421s)

13-228

13-51

8-96

10-163

Review

65-110

8-64

3-30

22-193

1
Range represents the minimum and maximum average reported burden hours per case; the median value was
64 for preliminaries, 51.5 for finals, and 75 for review investigations.
2
Range represents the minimum and maximum reported burden hours per case; the median value was 39 for
preliminaries, 30 for finals, and 32 for review investigations.
3
Range represents the minimum and maximum reported burden hours per case; the median value was 20
finals and 13 for review investigations.
4
Range represents the minimum and maximum reported burden hours per case; the median value was 19 for
preliminaries, 22 for finals, and 48 for review investigations.
5
Not applicable; purchaser questionnaires are not issued in preliminary investigations.

Source: Compiled from data reported in response to Commission questionnaires for the current generic clearance
that were available as of April 2011.

As shown, the range of burden varies among reporting firms for a specific investigation and for various
types of questionnaires (and investigations); the minimum and maximum reported burdens were highest
for domestic producer questionnaires regardless of the type of investigation.13
Annualized cost to respondents.--The estimated total cost, on an annual basis, to respondents of the
proposed information collections for July 2011 through June 2014 is $15.7 million (table 3). This cost
was obtained by multiplying the number of burden hours estimated to be imposed by questionnaires
cleared under the requested generic clearance by the average cost per hour to respond. The average cost
per hour to respond is based on actual cost data reported by respondents to Commission questionnaires
issued under the current generic clearance.

13

See comments in item 8 on variations in outside reporting burden.

12

Table 3
Estimated annual cost data, by type of information collection, July 2011-June 2014
Questionnaires

Item

Producer

Importer

Purchaser

Foreign
producer

Institution
notices
for 5-year
reviews

Total

Total burden hours1

53,672

51,292

34,678

45,443

917

186,002

Cost per burden hour2

$83.21

$81.84

$78.40

$63.44

$83.95

(3)

4,466

4,198

2,719

2,883

1,427

15,693

Total cost ($1,000)4
1

The component of total response burden from table 1 that is attributable to burden on responding firms (but
excludes outside review and third-party review burden).
2
Actual cost per hour incurred by firms except for the institution notices which are an average of data reported
by domestic firms. Data are calculated from the total cost to complete the questionnaires reported by firms in their
responses to questionnaires issued under the current generic clearance. Firms were not requested to separate
their costs into wage or other categories.
3
Not calculated.
4
Data were not adjusted upward to account for inflation over the three-year period covered by a generic
clearance.
Source: Compiled from data reported in response to Commission questionnaires for the current generic clearance
that were available as of April 2011.

(13) Total annual cost burden.--The total annual cost burden to responding firms is shown above in
table 3. There are no known capital and start-up cost components. However, the estimated cost of the
outside review (i.e., the services of outside legal and financial advisors to review the questionnaires prior
to their submission to the Commission) and third party disclosure burden (i.e., service of the
questionnaires on other parties to an investigation under the administrative protective order) is provided
as a maintenance and purchase of services component cost in table 4.
Table 4
Estimated purchase of services component cost
Questionnaires
Item
Producer

Importer

Purchaser

Foreign
producer

Institution
notices
for 5-year
reviews

Total

Estimated cost imposed annually in July 2011-June 2014
Total cost ($1,000)2

531.0

129.8

8.1

951.7

116.2

1736.7

1

Does not include the estimated cost imposed on responding firms provided in table 3.
Data were not adjusted upward to account for inflation over the three-year period covered by a generic
clearance.
2

Source: Calculated from historical cost data applied to outside review and third-party disclosure burden estimated
per the definitions provided in table 1.

13

(14) Annualized cost to the Federal Government.--The total project cost for the Commission’s import
injury investigations was $22.5 million for FY 2010. In addition to staff time, this figure includes travel,
data processing, and printing costs plus the cost of personnel benefits and overhead. The total project cost
is provided here since the questionnaires (and institution notices for the five-year sunset reviews) issued
by the Commission are an integral part of its investigations.

(15) Program changes and/or adjustments.--The current generic clearance authority for 198,205 hours
of average annual burden expires on June 30, 2011. As shown in table 1, this request for an extension
projects a total respondent burden of 186,002 hours for a decrease of 6.1 percent. This slight decrease
reflects the slightly lower projection in caseload for this requested period (July 2011-June 2014) vis-a-vis
to the previous period (July 2008-June 2011). One difference in case projections is the decline in review
investigations as the Commission will complete the third round of transition cases in this period.
Moreover, improvements in data collection (e.g., questionnaires issued in a filleable Word document and
the ability to upload questionnaire electronically via a secure dropbox) increase efficiency by reducing
time for companies to copy and mail questionnaires thus, also contributing to the slightly lower estimate.
(16) Plans for tabulation and publication.--After a questionnaire is mailed for a specific investigation,
firms are contacted by Commission staff to ensure that they received the questionnaire and are able to
supply the data. There is a telephone or e-mail follow-up to firms that do not respond by the due date.
After the questionnaires are returned, Commission staff reviews each response for accuracy, resolves any
questions with the respondent, and compiles responses using various forms of information technology.
Data from questionnaires issued under the current generic clearance largely were processed using LOTUS
1-2-3. The tabulation process is basically one of compilation; no particularly complex analytical
techniques as such are used. However, the process itself is somewhat complex in that it is designed to
perform numerous edits and other checks needed to identify respondent and data-entry error. The
computer programs also permit the compiled data to be displayed in a variety of formats that highlight the
pertinent issues and questions so as to aid the Commission in its analysis and subsequent determination.14
Compiled data from the questionnaires are transmitted to the Commission in the form of a staff report.
(Questionnaire data are also scanned into the Commission’s Electronic Document Information System
(EDIS) and made available electronically to authorized persons within the Commission.) A version of the
Commission’s report for each investigation with all confidential material deleted is published shortly after
the end of a specific investigation in a document that also contains the Commission’s determination for
that investigation and the Commissioners’ opinions. Copies of the published report are made available on
the Commission’s website (see http://www.usitc.gov/publications/index.htm). Prior to the publication of
the report, and immediately after the Commission’s vote in a specific investigation, a press release is
issued that provides the outcome of the vote and lists factual highlights of the investigation. In addition,
the Commission’s determination for each investigation is published in the Federal Register.
The time schedule depends upon the type and length of the specific investigation. For antidumping and
countervailing duty investigations, escape-clause investigations, and market disruption investigations, the
Commission has statutory deadlines for reporting its determination, which range from 45 days to six

14

As indicated in item 2, the Commission releases completed questionnaires to authorized representatives of
interested parties under the terms of an administrative protective order. The Commission now provides the releases
on a compact disc, which permits the representatives to access the data electronically and assists in the
representatives’ preparation of subsequent submissions to the Commission.

14

months from the date of receipt of a petition, request from the President, or Congressional resolution. The
deadlines for escape-clause review, changed circumstances, antidumping and countervailing duty review
investigations, and investigations on interference with programs of the USDA generally range from three
to six months. The actual time schedule for an investigation is determined when the case is instituted.

(17) Approval to not display the expiration date for OMB approval.--Not applicable. The
questionnaires and notices of institution of five-year sunset reviews issued under the generic clearance
will display the expiration date for OMB approval of the information collection.

(18) Consistency with CFR 1320.9 guidelines.--There are no known exceptions to the certification
statement identified in Item 19, “Certification for Paperwork Reduction Act Submissions,” of OMB Form
83-1 for this proposed information collection.

Part B. Collections of Information Employing Statistical Methods
The Commission does not use statistical sampling methodology for information collections conducted
under the generic clearance but instead typically sends questionnaire to the entire population or to a
substantial portion of the population of firms producing, importing, and/or purchasing the product in
question. Initially, a petitioning domestic producer is required to identify all domestic producers and
importers of the relevant product known to it as well as the foreign producers in the subject country(ies).
The Commission supplements this information with publicly available sources (for domestic and foreign
producers) and accesses confidential information from Customs (for importers and foreign producers) to
compile the lists of firms to receive questionnaires. Purchaser names are provided to the Commission by
the domestic producers and importers. See item 16 above for information on how the Commission
maximizes response rates.
For a specific investigation, the Commission usually sends producer questionnaires to all U.S. firms
manufacturing the product(s) in question. In most investigations there are no more than a total of 20 to 30
firms in the United States, and often far fewer, producing the relevant product(s). Commission
experience has shown that a universe size of 20 to 30 firms generally is too small to use sampling
procedures and obtain precise estimates of population parameters. Also, some of the information
contained in the producers’ questionnaire (e.g., questions as to the impact of imports on firms’ operations)
is relevant for the Commission’s determinations regardless of the size of the respondent. Similarly, the
Commission attempts to obtain data from all foreign manufacturers of the subject product, especially if
they are exporting to the United States. Typically, there are fewer than 10 foreign manufacturers per
country involved in any Commission investigation.15
In contrast to domestic and foreign manufacturers, the Commission often does not attempt to obtain data
from every U.S. importer and purchaser of the relevant product(s). Importer and purchaser questionnaires
are, however, mailed to the most substantial firms that import or purchase from the countries where the
subject merchandise is produced. Concentrating staff effort on a smaller group of firms permits the
Commission to fully edit and review returned questionnaires and minimize the burden on smaller
15
The Commission compiles separate data for each country considered. For the current generic clearance, a total
of 13.4 firms for all countries combined returned questionnaires per investigation.

15

respondents. Where possible, the Commission uses official Commerce statistics to determine import
levels, in some cases adjusting those statistics on the basis of importer questionnaire responses. Further, a
key purpose of the purchasers’ questionnaire is not to estimate population totals but to obtain an objective
assessment of the factors of competition between domestically produced and imported products.
Commission reports indicate when the entire universe of firms was not surveyed.
Notices of the institution of five-year sunset reviews are not mailed to firms, but published in the Federal
Register. Responses are solicited and are voluntary.

16


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