In the 2000s, Chinese solar panel manufacturers sold panels in the U.S. and Europe at prices that U.S. and European manufacturers claimed were below production cost — enabled by substantial Chinese government subsidies to the solar industry. Western manufacturers argued this constituted dumping: artificially low prices that, if sustained, would drive domestic producers out of the market and establish Chinese dominance in a strategically important clean energy sector. The U.S. and EU imposed anti-dumping duties to offset the price advantage. The debate over whether this protected legitimate domestic industry or preserved inefficient incumbents at consumer expense is a compressed version of the dumping policy debate writ large.
In plain terms
Dumping occurs when a foreign producer sells goods in an export market at a price below "normal value" — defined as either:
- The price charged in the exporting firm's home market (international price discrimination)
- The cost of production plus a reasonable profit margin (below-cost pricing)
The World Trade Organization's Anti-Dumping Agreement establishes that dumping is not automatically illegal — it is only actionable when it causes or threatens material injury to domestic industries in the importing country. When both conditions are met (dumping margin + material injury), importing countries can impose anti-dumping duties up to the size of the dumping margin.
Why it works this way
Dumping can arise from several distinct mechanisms:
Predatory pricing: a foreign firm prices below cost to drive out domestic competitors, with the intent to raise prices once competition is eliminated. This is the most harmful form, analogous to domestic predatory pricing prohibited by antitrust law.
Price discrimination: the exporting firm charges different prices in different markets, pricing higher at home (where it has market power) and lower in export markets (where competition is more intense). This is the most common form — rational third-degree price discrimination, not necessarily predatory.
Government subsidy: below-market pricing is enabled by export subsidies that reduce the firm's effective cost — an indirect government subsidy to foreign consumers at domestic taxpayer expense.
The U.S. International Trade Commission investigates anti-dumping petitions filed by domestic industries. The Department of Commerce calculates the dumping margin; the USITC determines injury. If both find affirmatively, anti-dumping duties are imposed.
A real example
Steel is the most frequently dumped product in U.S. trade law. The USITC's steel trade remedies database shows dozens of active anti-dumping orders against steel products from China, South Korea, India, and other major producers — reflecting persistent allegations of below-cost pricing enabled by excess capacity and state subsidies in foreign steel industries.
Why it matters
Dumping policy involves genuine tensions. Anti-dumping duties protect domestic import-competing industries and their workers, but they raise prices for downstream industries and consumers who benefit from lower-cost imports. Predatory dumping (if it actually occurs) creates long-run competition concerns; price-discrimination dumping creates short-run consumer benefits. The policy response should distinguish between the two — a distinction that anti-dumping proceedings do not always make cleanly.





