OPINION
Seven plaintiff Chinese producers and exporters of fresh garlic commenced this action to challenge the final results of the U.S. Department of Commerce’s tenth administrative review of the antidumping duty order covering fresh garlic from the People’s Republic of China.
See generally
Fresh Garlic from the People’s Republic of China: Final Results and Partial Rescission of Antidumping Duty Administrative Review and Final Results of New Shipper Review, 71 Fed.Reg. 26,329 (May 4, 2006) (“Final Results”);
see also
Issues and Decision Memorandum for the Administrative Review and New Shipper Reviews of the Antidumping Duty Order on Fresh Garlic from the People’s Republic of China (April 26, 2006) (Pub.Doc. No. 462) (“Issues and Decision Memorandum”);
Zhengzhou Harmoni Spice Co. v. United States,
Jinan Yipin I
analyzed the seven issues raised by the plaintiff Chinese producers/exporters, sustaining Commerce’s determination as to two of the issues and remanding the remaining five to the agency.
See generally Jinan Yipin I,
Now pending before the court is Commerce’s Second Remand Determination, filed pursuant to Jinan Yipin II. See generally Final Remand Results of Redeter-mination Pursuant to Second Remand (“Second Remand Determination”). The Domestic Producers (i.e., the Fresh Garlic Producers Association and its four constituent members), 1 Defendant-Intervenors in this action, challenge the Second Remand Determination as to one of the four issues addressed therein. See generally Defendant-Intervenors’ Comments Regarding Second Remand Redetermination (“Def.-Ints.’ Brief’); Defendant-Intervenors’ Reply Comments Regarding Second Remand Redetermination (“Def.-Ints.’ Reply Brief’). For their part, the Government and the three Plaintiff Chinese produc ers/exporters — i.e., Jinan Yipin Corporation, Ltd. (“Jinan Yipin”), Linshu Dading *1299 Private Agricultural Products Co., Ltd. (“Linshu Dading”), and Sunny Import and Export Co., Ltd. (“Sunny”) (collectively, the “Chinese Producers”) — urge that the Second Remand Determination be sustained in all respects. See Defendant’s Response to Comments Regarding Rede-termination Pursuant to Court Remand (“Def.’s Response Brief’) at 1-2,16; Plaintiffs’ Response to Defendant-Intervenors’ Comments Regarding Second Remand Re-determination (“Pis.’ Response Brief’) at 6.
Jurisdiction lies under 28 U.S.C. § 1581(c) (2000). 2 For the reasons detailed below, Commerce’s Second Remand Determination is sustained.
I. Background
Seven Chinese producers and exporters of fresh garlic brought this action to contest various aspects of the Final Results of Commerce’s tenth administrative review of the antidumping duty order on fresh garlic from China, which covered the period from November 1, 2003 through October 31, 2004.
See generally Jinan Yipin I,
Jinan Yipin I
analyzed each of the seven issues that the plaintiff Chinese producers/exporters raised, sustaining Commerce’s determination as to two issues and remanding the other five for further consideration.
See generally Jinan Yipin I,
*1300 In its First Remand Determination, Commerce revalued raw garlic bulbs, labor, and ocean freight. See First Remand Determination at 5-15, 15-38, 38-41. On the other hand, Commerce continued to value cardboard packing cartons and plastic jars and lids as it had in the Final Results. See id. at 41-46, 46-50, 68-71, 71-74. As a result of its reconsideration in the course of the first remand, Commerce recalculated the weighted-average anti-dumping duty margin for Jinan Yipin as 55.18% (up from 29.52%), for Linshu Dad-ing as 39.51% (up from 22.47%), and for Sunny as 26.67% (up from 10.52%). See id. at 74-75; Final Results, 71 Fed.Reg. at 26,332.
Commerce’s First Remand Determination was the subject of
Jinan Yipin II. See generally Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at-,
In its Second Remand Determination, Commerce has revalued raw garlic bulbs, using data from the Indian Agricultural Marketing Information Network (“Ag-marknet”) for garlic grown in the five “long-day zone” states of India. See Second Remand Determination at 1,10,12-17, 31, 36. Commerce also has now recalculated the surrogate labor rate in accordance with the agency’s revised methodology. See id. at 1, 24-31, 38 (relying on Antidumping Methodologies in Proceedings Involving Non-Market Economies: Valuing the Factor of Production: Labor, 76 Fed.Reg. 36,092 (June 21, 2011); also reconsidering valuation of labor data reflected in surrogate financial ratios, and revising average surrogate financial ratios accordingly). In addition, to value cardboard packing cartons as well as plastic jars and lids for purposes of the Second Remand Determination, Commerce has implicitly adopted the fundamental reasoning of Jinan Yipin II and has therefore relied on the domestic Indian price quotes that the Chinese Producers had placed on the administrative record, in lieu of the Indian import statistics that the agency relied on in its prior determinations in this case. See Second Remand Determination at 1, 23-24, 38. 5 As a result of these *1301 changes, the Second Remand Determination calculates the margins for both Jinan Yipin and Linshu Dading to be 0.00%, and 0.04% for Sunny. See id. at 1-2.
Although they do not dispute Commerce’s revised surrogate values for labor, cardboard packing cartons, and plastic jars and lids, 6 the Domestic Producers contest the Second Remand Determination as to the surrogate value for raw garlic bulbs. See generally Def.-Ints.’ Brief; Def.-Ints.’ Reply Brief. Specifically, the Domestic Producers contend that this matter must be remanded to Commerce yet again “to select a surrogate value that is specific to the fresh garlic exported to the United States by the [Chinese Producers].” Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 2; see also id. at 21-22; Def.-Ints.’ Reply Brief at 2, 10-11. In contrast, the Government' and the Chinese Producers urge that the Second Remand Determination be sustained in all respects. See Def.’s Response Brief at 1-2, 16; Pis.’ Response Brief at 6.
II. Standard of Review
In an action reviewing an anti-dumping determination by Commerce, the agency’s determination must be upheld except to the extent that it is found to be “unsupported by substantial evidence on the record, or otherwise not in accordance with law.” 19 U.S.C. § 1516a(b)(1)(B)(i);
see also NMB Singapore Ltd. v. United States,
Finally, while Commerce must explain the bases for its decisions, “its explanations do not have to be perfect.”
NMB
*1302
Singapore,
III. Analysis
As
Jinan Yipin II
explained, dumping occurs when goods are imported into the United States and sold at a price lower than their “normal value,” resulting in material injury (or the threat of material injury) to the U.S. industry.
See Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at-,
Normal value is typically calculated using either the price in the exporting market (ie., the price in the “home market” where the goods are produced) or the cost of production of the goods, when the exporting country is a market economy country. See generally 19 U.S.C. § 1677b. 7 However, where — as here — the exporting country has a non-market economy (“NME”), there is often concern that the factors of production used to produce the goods at issue are under state control, and that home market sales may not be reliable indicators of normal value. See 19 U.S.C. § 1677(18)(A).
In cases such as this, where the subject merchandise is exported from an NME country and Commerce concludes that concerns about the sufficiency or reliability of the available data do not permit the normal value of the goods to be determined in the typical manner, Commerce “deter-minéis] the normal value of the subject merchandise on the basis of the value of the factors of production,” including “an amount for general expenses and profit plus the cost of containers, coverings, and other expenses.”
See
19 U.S.C. § 1677b(e)(1);
see generally Ningbo Dafa Chem. Fiber Co. v. United States,
In determining which data constitute the “best available information,” Commerce generally looks to the criteria set forth in its “Policy Bulletin 04.1,” also known as the “NME Surrogate Country Policy Bulletin.” Policy Bulletin 04.1 explains:
In assessing data and data sources, it is [Commerce’s] stated practice to use investigation or review period-wide price averages, prices specific to the input in question, prices that are net of taxes and import duties, prices that are contemporaneous with the period of investigation or review, and publicly available data.
See Import Administration Policy Bulletin 04. 1, “Non-Market Economy Surrogate Country Selection Process,” at “Data Considerations” (March 1, 2004) (“Policy Bulletin 04.1”) 9 ; see also .First Remand Determination at 42 (quoting Policy Bulletin and stating that it reflects agency’s “well-established practice for determining the reliability and appropriateness of surrogate values”).
Within this general framework, the statute “accords Commerce wide discretion in the valuation of factors of production in the application of [the statute’s] guidelines.”
See Shakeproof,
Nevertheless, Commerce’s discretion is not boundless. In exercising its discretion, Commerce is constrained by the purpose of the antidumping statute, which is “to determine antidumping margins, ‘as accurately as possible.’.”
See Shakeproof,
In the present case, pursuant to the instructions in Jinan Yipin II, Commerce’s Second Remand Determination re *1304 considered and revised the surrogate value for raw garlic bulbs, as well as the surrogate values for labor, cardboard packing cartons, and-plastic jars and lids. As discussed in greater detail below, that determination is sustained in all respects.
A. Surrogate Value for Raw Garlic Bulbs
In the administrative review at issue, rather than valuing the Chinese Producers’ so-called “growing” and “harvesting” factors of production
(ie.,
the garlic seed, water, pesticides, herbicides, fertilizer, plastic film, labor, and other “inputs” (commodities) consumed by Chinese producers in cultivating and harvesting whole raw garlic bulbs), Commerce broke with its past practice and employed the agency’s “intermediate input methodology” to value the whole raw garlic bulb (the “intermediate input”) itself.
See Jinan Yipin I,
As
Jinan Yipin I
explained, the Chinese Producers’ garlic “is a large, high yield, high-quality type of garlic that is distinct from the overwhelming majority of garlic grown in India.”
See Jinan Yipin I,
Relying on the Market Research Report and additional information on the record, the Final Results explained that Chinese garlic exported to the United States is characterized by its relatively large bulb size; that the bulb size of local, native garlic typically grown and sold in the Indian market is significantly smaller; and that, in India, cultivation of large-bulb garlic is generally confined to the country’s “long-day zone,” which enjoys longer periods of sunlight.
See Jinan Yipin I,
However, as
Jinan Yipin I
emphasized, the Agmarknet data provide no description of the physical characteristics of “China” garlic (or any other category of garlic reflected therein).
See Jinan Yipin I,
In addition to the Chinese Producers’ concerns about product specificity (discussed above),
Jinan Yipin I
addressed a
*1306
number of other issues.
See generally Jinan Yipin I,
Citing the concerns identified in
Jinan Yipin I
(particularly the lack of any physical description of “China” garlic and the various other categories of garlic reflected in the Agmarknet data), the First Remand Determination declined to rely on the Ag-marknet data.
See
First Remand Determination at 5, 7-8, 15. Instead, the First Remand Determination relied on an additional set of data, which Commerce placed on the record in the course of the first remand
proceeding
— ie., information on garlic prices at the produce market near Delhi operated by the Azadpur Agricultural Produce Marketing Committee (“APMC”), as published in the Azadpur APMC’s “Market Information Bulletin,” for the two-and-one-half-month period from May 1, 2006 through July 14, 2006.
See id.
at 2, 6, 10, 13, 15;
see also Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at-,
Jinan Yipin II
closely critiqued — and roundly rejected — the First Remand Determination’s use of the Azadpur APMC data,
13
concluding that “[s]erious issues exist as to the contemporaneity, representa
*1307
tiveness, and product specificity of those data.”
Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at-,
In the course of the most recent remand proceeding, Commerce reopened the administrative record to allow the parties to submit additional information concerning the valuation of raw garlic bulbs, as well as garlic seed. See Second Remand Determination at 4-5, 7-9. In the resulting Second Remand Determination, Commerce reaffirmed its conclusion that the agency’s intermediate input methodology “results in a more accurate dumping margin than the use of the traditional [factors of production] methodology.” Id. at 9-10; see also id. at 10-12. Commerce further determined, based on a comprehensive review of the strengths and weaknesses of all data on the record, 14 that the Agmarknet data (on which the Final Results were based) constitute the best available information for use in calculating a surrogate value for raw garlic bulbs. See id. at 1, 9-10, 12-23, 31-37. However, rather than relying on data for a single category of garlic (i e., the “China” category) as Commerce did in the Final Results, the Second Remand Determination instead uses the average for the six specific Agmarknet categories of garlic grown in the five “long-day zone” states in India (i.e., Punjab, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu and Kashmir, and Uttar-anchal) — the regions where longer periods of sunlight result in large-bulb garlic similar to the Chinese garlic at issue here. See id. at 1, 10, 12, 13, 15, 31-32. In addition, Commerce also made certain adjustments, which are not at issue here, to address the Chinese Producers’ concerns about “captur[ing] the farm gate prices.” See id. at 10, 17-19. 15 Using these “fil *1308 tered” Agmarknet data, Commerce calculated a final weighted-average price of 8.35 rupees per kilogram to value raw garlic bulbs for purposes of the Second Remand Determination. See id. at 36-37; compare id. at 12 (specifying 8.3471 rupees per kilogram).
Neither the Chinese Producers nor the Domestic Producers contest the Second Remand Determination’s use of the Ag-marknet database in calculating a surrogate value for raw garlic bulbs. Similarly, neither party contests Commerce’s decision to “filter” the Agmarknet data set so as to use only data for garlic grown in India’s five long-day zone states. 16 Indeed, like the Government, the Chinese Producers maintain that the surrogate value calculated in the Second Remand Determination based on that “filtered” data set should be sustained. See Def.’s Response Brief at 1-2, 7, 15, 16; Pis.’ Response Brief at 1, 6. However, the Domestic Producers contend that the data should be further filtered, such that Commerce should use data for only three of the six Agmarknet categories of garlic that are reflected in the Second Remand Determination’s calculations. See generally Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 2-3, 11-16, 21-22; Def.-Ints.’ Reply Brief at 2,10.
Specifically, the Domestic Producers emphasize that the Chinese garlic at issue here has a bulb diameter of 50 millimeters (“mm”) or greater, and that not all of the garlic that is grown in India’s long-day zone states has a comparable bulb size. See Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 8-16; Def.-Ints.’ Reply Brief at 3, 4, 9-10. The Domestic Producers argue that the data set used in the Second Remand Determination thus is overly broad and not sufficiently “product-specific” to the Chinese Producers’ garlic, and that the data set should be further limited to exclude data on categories of garlic that — according to the Domestic Producers — do not have a bulb diameter comparable to the Chinese Producers’ garlic. See Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 11-16, 21-22; Def.-Ints.’ Reply Brief at 2,10.
There is no dispute that the subject Chinese garlic bulbs have a diameter of 50 mm or greater.
See, e.g.,
Second Remand Determination at 13; Def.’s Response Brief at 5. Similarly, there is no dispute that not all garlic grown in India’s long-day zone states has a bulb diameter of 50 mm or more.
See, e.g.,
Second Remand Determination at 32; Pis.’ Response Brief at 2. Moreover, in principle, there is no question but that it would be optimal to exclude from Commerce’s calculations all data on garlic bulbs with a diameter of less than 50 mm, to render the surrogate value data perfectly “product-specific” to the subject Chinese garlic bulbs.
See, e.g.,
Policy Bulletin 04.1 (expressing Commerce preference for data “specific to the input in question”);
Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at -,
However, perfect data is virtually non-existent in the real world. See general *1309 ly Second Remand Determination at 9 (“acknowledging] that all of the surrogate value sources placed on the record to value garlic bulb are imperfect”); id. at 20 (same); Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 11 (quoting and concurring in the Second Remand Determination’s observation); Def.’s Response Brief at 13,14. Here, after careful consideration, Commerce concluded in its Second Remand Determination that (notwithstanding the Domestic Producers’ claims) the evidence simply does not establish that further filtering the Agmarknet data set would in fact render the data more product-specific, and that — based on the existing record — any attempt to further filter the data would be fraught with the potential for distortion. See Second Remand Determination at 32, 36. 17 Commerce therefore determined that “the subset of the Agmarknet data that reflects values for Indian domestic garlic grown in the [long-day zone states] is the best available information to value garlic bulb,” “results in the most [product-]specific surrogate value,” and “is far superior to the other data sources on the record” for use in calculating an appropriate surrogate value. See id. at 12,17, 20. 18 As discussed below, under the circumstances of this case, that determination was a reasonable one. See generally Def.’s Response Brief at 5, 14; Pis.’ Response Brief at 1, 6.
The Domestic Producers maintain that, of the six Agmarknet categories of garlic included in the data set used in the Second Remand Determination’s calculations, *1310 three of those categories — denominated “Desi,” “Average,” and “Other” — have bulb diameters that are not comparable to the Chinese Producers’ garlic and should be excluded from Commerce’s surrogate value calculation. See Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 12-16, 21-22; Def.-Ints.’ Reply Brief at 5-8, 10 (reiterating arguments concerning “Desi,” “Average,” and “Other” categories). In other words, the Domestic Producers contend that the Agmarknet data set for the five long-day zone states used in Commerce’s surrogate value calculation should be limited to include only data for the three categories of garlic that Agmark-net denominates as “China,” “New Medium,” and “Garlic.” See generally Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 11-21 (captioned “The Department Should Rely on Values for ‘China,’ ‘Garlic,’ and ‘New Medium’ Varieties to Calculate a Surrogate Value”). 19 Commerce rejected the Domestic Producers’ argument, concluding that — contrary to their claims — “the record does not support filtering the data for the undefined Ag-marknet designations ‘Desi,’ ‘Average,’ and ‘Other.’ ” See Second Remand Determination at 32.
In an effort to support their claim that the “Desi,” “Average,” and “Other” categories of garlic are characterized by small bulb size, the Domestic Producers argue that the Agmarknet data set used in the Second Remand Determination includes more data points for those three categories than for the other three categories (ie., “China,” “New Medium,” and “Garlic”) and that the prices for the “Desi,” “Average,” and “Other” categories are lower than the prices for the “China,” “New Medium,” and “Garlic” categories. See Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 14, 16; Def.-Ints.’ Reply Brief at 7-8. The Domestic Producers further argue that this is consistent with the Market Research Report, which indicates generally that garlic production in India is dominated by local varieties with smaller bulb sizes and a lower value. See Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 16; Def.-Ints.’ Reply Brief at 6-8. The Domestic Producers maintain that it therefore follows inexorably that the lower-priced categories of garlic reflected in the Agmarknet data, by definition, have a bulb size smaller than the Chinese Producers’ garlic at issue here. See, e.g., Def.-
*1311
Ints.’ Brief at 16; Def.-Ints.’ Reply Brief at 7, 8. However, as noted in
Jinan Yipin I
and quoted in the Second Remand Determination, the implication that “higher price” necessarily “equals[] bigger-bulb” is overly simplistic,
20
and is not alone sufficient to compel Commerce to reach the conclusion that the Domestic Producers urge.
See generally Jinan Yipin I,
The Domestic Producers also cite certain evidence which they claim proves that the “Desi” category of garlic is limited to local varieties with a smaller bulb size and a lower value. The Domestic Producers note that the Issues and Decision Memorandum that accompanied the Final Results in this matter states that “[t]he term ‘Desi’ is a general term referring to the Indian subcontinent. Thus, ‘Desi’ garlic refers to a variety of garlic which, as the respondents have argued, may be more pungent than Chinese varieties, but is also mostly smaller in size.” See Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 14-15 (quoting Issues and Decision Memorandum at 44 (emphasis added by Domestic Producers)) 22 ; see also Def.-Ints.’ Reply Brief at 5-6. But see Def.’s *1312 Response Brief at 9-10, 11. Similarly, in the course of the most recent remand, the Domestic Producers placed on the administrative record an entry from the Oxford Dictionary defining the term “desi” to mean “local” or “indigenous.” See Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 15 & n. 28; Def.-Ints.’ Reply Brief at 5, 8. But see Def.’s Response Brief at 9-10, 11; Second Remand Determination at 88.
But the evidence that the Domestic Producers cite is not nearly as potent as they suggest. The meaning of “desi” in common parlance is not at issue. The open question is the precise definition of the term as it is used by Agmarknet to categorize garlic. 23 As the Second Remand Determination explains, there is simply no evidence that speaks to how the Agmark-net database itself defines “Desi” as the term is used to denominate one of the six categories of garlic at issue. The record is devoid of any evidence documenting the physical characteristics of the garlic that Agmarknet categorizes as “Desi.” See Second Remand Determination at 16, 32, 33, 36. 24
The Domestic Producers’ claim concerning the definition of “Desi” (disposed of above) is the linchpin for the Domestic Producers’ next argument, which seeks to exclude from Commerce’s surrogate value calculations the data concerning the “Average” and “Other” categories of garlic. Beginning from the premise that garlic categorized by Agmarknet as “Desi” garlic is “local” and “indigenous” and thus has smaller-sized bulbs (ie., the proposition addressed immediately above), the Domestic Producers argue that — “because the *1313 volume and value for Desi variety transactions are similar to those reported for the ‘Average’ and ‘Other’ varieties, and because ... smaller-sized garlic bulbs in India are sold at lower prices than larger-sized bulbs” — “the only reasonable conclusion” that Commerce could possibly have drawn is that “the transactions involving ‘Average’ and ‘Other’ varieties are comparable to the transactions involving the local, indigenous, small-sized Desi variety garlic bulbs.” See Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 15-16; Def.-Ints.’ Reply Brief at 7. But see Second Remand Determination at 34-36; Def.’s Response Brief at 9-10.
The Domestic Producers significantly overstate their case. To the extent that this argument is predicated on, and analogizes from, the Domestic Producers’ assertions concerning the characteristics of garlic categorized by Agmarknet as “Desi,” this argument too must fail. Again, as the Second Remand Determination explains, there is no record evidence documenting the characteristics of any of the six Ag-marknet categories of garlic at issue, including not only the “Desi” category, but also “Average” and “Other,” as well as “China,” “New Medium,” and “Garlic.” See Second Remand Determination at 16, 32, 33, 34, 36.
The gravamen of the Domestic Producers’ remaining arguments is that the Ag-marknet data for garlic categorized as “China” garlic should be included in Commerce’s calculation of a surrogate value for raw garlic bulbs. See generally Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 16-21. 25 There is no need to discuss these arguments in any detail, 26 because the data set used in the Second Remand Determination includes the “China” data (in addition to the five other specific categories of garlic included in the Agmarknet data base for India’s five long-day zone states). See Second Remand Determination at 31. 27
Jinan Yipin II
explicitly stated that nothing in
Jinan Yipin I
precluded Commerce from relying on the Agmarknet database, provided that Commerce adequately justified its selection of the specific data that it used.
See Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at-n. 57,
In sum, Commerce’s calculation of a surrogate value for raw garlic bulbs using Agmarknet data for the six categories of garlic reported for India’s five long-day zone states must be sustained. To be sure, the Domestic Producers’ challenges to the specificity of those data are not wholly lacking in substance. Had Commerce made the extrapolations that the Domestic Producers advocate and drawn the inferences that the Domestic Producers urge — and thus excluded from the agency’s surrogate value calculations the Agmarknet data for garlic categorized as “Desi,” “Average,” and “Other” — it is possible that the agency’s determination might have been sustained. But an agency determination cannot be overturned merely because the agency could have reached the opposite result based on the same record. See generally Def.’s Response Brief at 13 (noting that “a reasonable mind could decline to draw the inferences [that the Domestic Producers] urged Commerce to draw in this case”).
The evidence that the Domestic Producers cite is neither so clear nor so strong as to
require
Commerce to reach a result other than that which the agency reached here. As discussed above, “[t]he process of constructing foreign market value for a producer in a non-market economy country is difficult and necessarily imprecise.”
Shakeproof
Moreover, as the Government underscores, it is the parties to a proceeding that bear the burden of building an adequate record.
See
Def.’s Response Brief at 13-14
(citing QVD Food Co. v. United States,
B. Surrogate Value for Labor
The antidumping statute provides that, in non-market economy cases such as this, the surrogate data used to calculate the value of factors of production must, to the extent possible, come from market economy countries that are at “a level of economic development comparable to that of the nonmarket economy country” at issue — in this case, China. See 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(4)(A). The antidumping stat *1315 ute further provides that, in such cases, the surrogate data must, to the extent possible, come from market economy countries that are “significant producers of comparable merchandise.” See 19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(4)(B).
For most factors of production, Commerce typically uses values from a single market economy country (known as the “surrogate country” — here, India) that Commerce has determined to be both (a) economically comparable to the non-market economy country in question and (b) a significant producer of the goods at issue.
See
19 C.F.R. § 351.408(c)(2). However, as
Jinan Yipin I
and
Jinan Yipin II
explained, Commerce in the past treated the cost of labor quite differently than other factors of production.
See Jinan Yipin I,
Concerned about “wide variances in wage rates between comparable economies,” Commerce historically valued the cost of labor in a non-market economy (“NME”) country case by using a regression-based wage rate “reflective of the observed relationship between wages and national income in a variety of market economy countries.”
See Jinan Yipin I,
In the Final Results in this case, Commerce calculated the Chinese Producers’ labor costs using the agency’s standard regression-based wage rate calculation methodology, as set forth in the agency’s regulations.
See Jinan Yipin I,
Relying heavily on
Allied Pacific
(which held Commerce’s regulation to be inconsistent with the statute),
Jinan Yipin I
remanded the issue of the surrogate value for labor to Commerce for further consideration.
See Jinan Yipin I,
In the meantime, however, the Court of Appeals handed down its decision in
Dor-best,
striking down Commerce’s regulation as inconsistent with the plain language of the statute.
See generally Dorbest,
In the course of the most recent remand, Commerce reconsidered its approach to the calculation of surrogate values for labor expenses, in light of the Court of Appeals’ decision in
Dorbest,
as well as the decision in
Shandong Rongxin. See generally
Second Remand Determination at 24-31;
Dorbest,
For purposes of the Second Remand Determination here, Commerce relied on 2004 data (as reported in a 2005 publication of the International Labour Organization (“ILO”)), because those data were “the most contemporaneous data that were available” between November 1, 2003 and May 4, 2006 — i.e., “during the conduct of the underlying administrative review.” See Second Remand Determination at 26-27 (explaining, inter alia, that, on remand, agency used labor cost data for India “reported in the ILO Chapter 6A data”).
Specifically, Commerce selected “the industry-specific Indian data provided under Sub-Classification 15 ‘Manufacture of food products and beverages’ of the International Standard Industrial Classification— Revision 3-D standard.” See Second Remand Determination at 27. Based on those data, the Second Remand Determination calculated a revised labor rate of 24.50 rupees per hour. Id.
As noted above, neither the Chinese Producers nor the Domestic Producers have objected to Commerce’s revised wage rate calculation as set forth in the Second Remand Determination. See Def.’s Response Brief at 15 (noting that “[n]o party objects to the Second Remand Results with respect to Commerce’s valuation of labor expenses,” and urging that “the Court should sustain Commerce’s Second Remand Results” on the issue); id. at 2 (same); see also Def.-Ints.’ Brief (offering no comments on any issue other than valuation of raw garlic bulbs); Def.-Ints.’ Reply Brief (same); Pis.’ Response Brief (same). Commerce’s determination on this issue is accordingly sustained.
C. Surrogate Value for Cardboard Packing Cartons
In the Final Results in this case, Commerce valued the cardboard cartons that are used to pack and ship garlic based on Indian import statistics taken from the
*1317
World Trade Atlas
28
for the Indian tariff subheading 4819. 1010, which covers, among other things, cartons, boxes, and cases made of corrugated paper and paperboard (which were formerly covered by subheading 4819.1001).
See Jinan Yipin I,
As
Jinan Yipin I
observed, however, the Final Results significantly “overstated any potential concerns as to the reliability of the domestic Indian box prices that the agency rejected, ... [and] significantly understated the patent flaws and defects in the Indian import statistics on which the agency relied.”
Jinan Yipin I,
Commerce’s First Remand Determination was “wholly unresponsive” to
Jinan Yipin I
on the issue of the use of Indian import statistics
versus
domestic price quotes for purposes of calculating the surrogate value for cardboard packing cartons.
See Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at-,
Noting that Commerce had seemingly chosen
“admittedly distorted
Indian import statistics over
potentially ‘perfect’
price quotes,”
Jinan Yipin II
held that the First Remand Determination failed to adequately explain and justify by reference to substantial record evidence the agency’s determination that the Indian import statistics constituted the “best available information” for use in calculating the surrogate value of basic cardboard packing cartons, in light of the acknowledged infirmities in the import statistics.
Jinan Yi-pin II,
35 CIT at-,
Commerce’s Second Remand Determination followed. In the Second Remand Determination, as a surrogate value for cardboard packing cartons, Commerce relied on the four domestic price quotes on the record, implicitly adopting the fundamental reasoning of Jinan Yipin II (and, in turn, Jinan Yipin I). The Second Remand Determination states:
The Court found [in Jinan Yipin II] that Commerce had chosen “admittedly distorted Indian import statistics over potentially ‘perfect’ price quotes.” While [Commerce] disagrees with this conclusion, [Commerce] is cognizant of the Court’s admonition that the [agency] is not likely to “get another bite of the apple on this issue.”....
Accordingly, ... [Commerce] has determined, under protest, to use the price quote surrogate values provided on the *1319 record by the plaintiffs during the underlying proceeding for this final remand redetermination. Using these price quotes, the surrogate value for cardboard cartons is 32.3750 Rupees per box....
Second Remand Determination at 23-24 (footnotes omitted); see also id. at 1 (stating that Commerce “has applied, under protest, the price quotes on the record of the underlying review as surrogates to value ... cardboard cartons”) 32 ; cf. Defendant’s Response to Comments Regarding Redetermination Pursuant to Court Remand at 9-11 (April 20, 2012), filed in Taian Ziyang Food Co. v. United States, *1320 Court No. 05-00399 (in companion case contesting Commerce’s determinations in administrative review immediately preceding review at issue in this action, which included parallel challenge to agency’s reliance on import statistics versus price quotes in surrogate valuation of cardboard packing cartons, agency ultimately decided to rely on price quotes (as the agency has done here), explaining that “the Remand Results are consistent with the Court’s holding” in Taian Ziyang II, and that “[i]n light of the Court’s concerns about the import statistics, ... Commerce reasonably adopted plaintiffs’ approach and used the domestic price quotes”).
As summarized below, and as set forth at length and in exhaustive detail in
Jinan Yipin I
and
Jinan Yipin II,
the record evidence — viewed through the lens of Commerce’s criteria in Policy Bulletin 04.1 — weighs solidly in favor of the price quotes.
See Jinan Yipin I,
As
Jinan Yipin II
explained, of the five criteria set forth in Policy Bulletin 04.1, “product specificity” logically must be the most important.
See Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at -,
Moreover, although the four domestic price quotes are not “contemporaneous” within the meaning of Policy Bulletin 04.1, the price quotes are just a few months outside the period of review.
See Jinan
*1321
Yipin II,
35 CIT at- & n. 102,
Like “contemporaneity,” Commerce’s “representativeness” criterion relates to the timing of price information. In contrast to the contemporaneity criterion (which concerns whether the price information is from within the review period at issue), the focus of the representativeness criterion is on whether the price information reflects “review period-wide price averages,” rather than prices for a more limited period of time.
See Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at-,
The record is equally definitive on “public availability.” As
Jinan Yipin I
observed, there is room for debate as to the precise meaning of “public availability.”
See generally Jinan Yipin I,
The record evidence favoring use of the Indian import statistics pales by comparison to the evidence supporting the domestic price quotes. It is true that the import statistics are publicly available information. And it is similarly undisputed that the import statistics are both contemporaneous and representative as well. On the other hand, the record evidence on product specificity — the most important of Commerce’s criteria — is damning.
In short, it is undisputed that the import statistics on the record are plagued by two serious infirmities. First, because the scope of the tariff heading on which the statistics are based is very broad,
40
the values reflected in the import statistics are inflated by the inclusion of (unknown, potentially vast) quantities of more expensive gift, specialty, and other types of non-packing boxes that bear no resemblance to the basic cardboard packing cartons that the Chinese Producers use to pack and ship garlic.
See Jinan Yipin I,
Surveying the state of the administrative record (as outlined above),
Jinan Yi-pin II
put it bluntly: On the strength of the administrative record before the agency in the Final Results and the First Remand Determination, and given the agency’s candid concessions as to the existing, patent flaws in the import statistics (as well as the absence of any affirmative evidence that the price quotes were not representative and reliable), Commerce’s pri- or decisions to rely on the import statistics over the price quotes constituted a choice of
“admittedly
distorted data over data that the agency speculated] may be
potentially
distorted.”
See Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at-,
The bottom line is that, to the extent that Commerce has a general policy that privileges the use of import statistics over price quotes due to concerns about the reliability of the latter, the agency’s skepti
*1325
cism may well be justified, and — all other things being equal — its policy would be entitled to great weight and would likely carry the day.
See generally Jinan Yipin I,
Commerce’s determination on the valuation of cardboard packing cartons in this action must be grounded in the evidence on this record. And the evidence on domestic price quotes versus import statistics is not in equipoise. While neither the Domestic Producers nor Commerce ever adduced even an iota of actual evidence to impeach the accuracy and reliability of the domestic price quotes, Commerce itself has candidly and unequivocally conceded that the values reflected in the import statistics are inflated. See, e.g., First Remand Determination at 46 (admitting that “[the] Indian import statistics do not perfectly represent the inputs of [the Chinese Producers] because the Indian import data include [1] specialty boxes and [2] boxes transported by air”); id. at 70 (same). 44
Under these circumstances, Commerce’s decision in the Second Remand Determination to value cardboard packing cartons using the domestic price quotes (rather than the Indian import statistics) is plainly supported by substantial evidence and otherwise in accordance with law. Commerce’s decision therefore must be sustained. See Def.’s Response Brief at 15 (noting that “[n]o party objects to the Second Remand Results with respect to Commerce’s ... surrogate value determination ] with respect to cartons,” and arguing that “the Court should sustain Commerce’s Second Remand Results” on the issue); id. at 2 (same). 45
D. Surrogate Value for Plastic Jars and Lids
In the Final Results in this case, Commerce valued the plastic jars and lids that are used to package garlic using a surrogate value derived from World Trade Atlas statistics for imports into India under two broad “basket” provisions of the Indian tariff system — specifically, subheading 3923.3090, a provision covering “[c]arboys, bottles, flasks and similar articles of plastics, [not either specified or included]” (formerly subheading 3923.3000), and subheading 3923.5000, covering “[s]toppers, lids, caps and other closures of plastics.”
See Jinan Yipin I,
In rejecting the domestic price quotes, the Final Results cited concerns about the “public availability” of the price quotes, as well as their “contemporaneity,” and their “representativeness.”
See Jinan Yipin I,
Much like the First Remand Determination’s treatment of cardboard packing cartons (discussed above), the First Remand Determination’s treatment of plastic jars and lids “add[ed] virtually nothing to this case” concerning the relative merits of the use of the Indian import statistics
versus
the four domestic price quotes.
Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at-,
Observing that the First Remand Determination seemingly had once again chosen
“admittedly distorted
Indian import statistics over
potentially ‘perfect’
price quotes,”
Jinan Yipin II
held that the First Remand Determination failed to adequately explain the agency’s determination that the Indian import statistics constituted the “best available information” for use in calculating the surrogate value of plastic jars and lids, in light of the admitted infirmities in the import statistics.
See Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at-,-,
In its Second Remand Determination, Commerce reversed course (implicitly adopting the reasoning underpinning Jinan Yipin II, and, in turn, Jinan Yipin /, as Commerce did vis-a-vis the valuation of cardboard packing cartons), using the four domestic price quotes — rather than the Indian import statistics — to value plastic jars and lids. The Second Remand Determination states:
The Court found [in Jinan Yipin II \ that Commerce had chosen “admittedly distorted Indian import statistics over potentially ‘perfect’ price quotes.” While [Commerce] disagrees with this conclusion, [Commerce] is cognizant of the Court’s admonition that the [agency] is not likely to “get another bite of the apple on this issue.”....
Accordingly, ... [Commerce] has determined, under protest, to use the price quote surrogate values provided on the record by the plaintiffs during the underlying proceeding for this final remand redetermination. Using these price quotes, ... the surrogate value used for plastic jars and lids is 26.8750 Rupees per jar.
Second Remand Determination at 23-24 (footnotes omitted); see also id. at 1 (stating that Commerce “has applied, under protest, the price quotes on the record of the underlying review as surrogates to value ... plastic jars and lids”) 47 ; cf. Defen *1328 dant’s Response to Comments Regarding Redetermination Pursuant to Court Remand at 9-11 (April 20, 2012), filed in Taian Ziyang Food Co. v. United States, Court No. 05-00399 (in companion case contesting Commerce’s determinations in administrative review immediately preceding review at issue in this action, which included parallel challenge to agency’s reliance on import statistics versus price quotes in surrogate valuation of plastic jars and lids, agency ultimately decided to rely on price quotes (as the agency has done here), explaining that “the Remand Results are consistent with the Court’s .holding” in Taian Ziyang II, and that “[i]n light of the Court’s concerns about the import statistics, ... Commerce reasonably adopted plaintiffs’ approach and used the domestic price quotes”).
As outlined below, and as set forth at length and in painstaking detail in
Jinan Yipin I
and
Jinan Yipin II,
the record evidence solidly favors use of the price quotes as surrogate values for plastic jars and lids.
See Jinan Yipin I,
As discussed above,
Jinan Yipin II
explained that — of the five criteria set forth in Policy Bulletin 04.1 — “product specificity” logically must be the most important.
See Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at-,
As to “contemporaneity,” there is — even as an abstract matter of principle — no real basis for concern, because two of the four price quotes fall squarely within the period of review and the other two are dated one week and three weeks after the period of review ended.
See Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at-,
As
Jinan Yipin II
observed, there is nothing whatsoever on the record of this proceeding to indicate that prices for plastic jars and lids are subject to any appreciable fluctuation.
See Jinan Yipin II,
85 CIT at-,
*1330
The record is no less clear on the issue of “public availability.” As discussed above, Commerce’s concern about information that is not publicly available is the risk of manipulation.
See
section III.C,
supra
(explaining, in analysis of cardboard packing cartons, that policy basis for “public availability” criterion is agency concern about potential for “manipulation”);
Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at -, -,
The record evidence supporting use of the Indian import statistics is not nearly as strong as that favoring the price quotes. True enough, the import statistics are publicly available, as well as both contemporaneous and representative. However, the record on product specificity — the most important of Commerce’s criteria — is a different story entirely.
Like the import statistics that Commerce used to value cardboard packing cartons until the Second Remand Determination, the import statistics that the Final Results and the First Remand Determination used to value plastic jars and lids suffer from two critical defects. The Indian import statistics for plastic jars and lids are much less product-specific than the domestic price quotes, both because the import statistics include a very broad range of “specialty” and other plastic products that bear no resemblance to the simple, basic plastic jars at issue in this case,
52
*1331
and because (like the import statistics for cardboard packing cartons, discussed above) the import statistics for plastic jars and lids include charges for air freight.
53
See Jinan Yipin I,
In its First Remand Determination, Commerce flatly admitted that the Indian import statistics reflect inflated values as a surrogate for the plastic jars and lids at issue here, both because the import statistics “include a broad range of products that are different from the plastic jars used to pack garlic,” and because the import statistics “include! ] products that, unlike those the [Chinese Producers] used, were shipped by air.” See First Remand Determination at 73; see also id. at 50 (same). 54 As such, the facts here are straightforward, compelling, and uncontro-verted. While the record evidence indisputably establishes that the values reflected in the Indian import statistics are (at least to some extent) inflated and thus do not accurately represent the basic plastic jars and lids at issue, there is no record evidence — absolutely none — to indicate that the domestic price quotes are in any way distorted or otherwise inaccurate.
Jinan Yipin II
put it bluntly: “[I]n contrast to the Indian import statistics (which are admittedly ‘imperfect’), there is no affirmative evidence that the domestic price quotes are in any way ‘imperfect.’ ”
See Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at-,
IV. Conclusion
For all the reasons set forth above, Commerce’s Second Remand Determination must be sustained. Judgment will enter accordingly.
Notes
. The four constituent members of the Fresh Garlic Producers Association are Christopher Ranch, L.L.C., The Garlic Company, Valley Garlic, and Vessey and Company, Inc.
. All citations to federal statutes are to the 2000 edition of the United States Code. Similarly, all citations to federal regulations are to the 2003 edition of the Code of Federal Regulations.
. Only four of the seven original Plaintiffs moved for judgment on the agency record,
i.e.,
Zhengzhou Harmoni Spice Co., Ltd., Jinan Yipin Corporation, Ltd., Linshu Dading Private Agricultural Products Co., Ltd., and Sunny Import and Export Co., Ltd. The other three — lining Trans-High Trading Co., Ltd., Jinxiang Shanyang Freezing Storage Co., Ltd., and Shanghai LJ Trading Co., Ltd.— played no role in the briefing or oral argument, and were later voluntarily dismissed from this action, together with Zhengzhou Harmoni Spice Co., Ltd.
See Jinan Yipin I,
.Following
Jinan Yipin I
but before Commerce issued its First Remand Determination, four of the seven Chinese producers that filed the Complaint in this action moved for voluntary dismissal with prejudice, which was granted.
See generally Zhengzhou Harmoni Spice Co. v. United States,
34 CIT-,
. The Second Remand Determination states that Commerce used the domestic price quotes "under protest.” See Second Remand Determination at 1, 24. As explained below, however, Jinan Yipin II did not impose any outcome or result on Commerce. See nn. 32, 47, infra.
. Notably, the Domestic Producers have not objected to Commerce’s use of domestic Indian price quotes in valuing cardboard packing cartons and plastic jars and lids in this Second Remand Determination in the tenth administrative review, although they did object to such price quotes in
Taian Ziyang,
a companion case involving the ninth administrative review of the same antidumping duty order that is at issue in this action.
See
Second Remand Determination at 6 (noting that Domestic Producers’ comments on draft Second Remand Determination addressed only valuation of raw garlic bulbs); Def.-Ints.’ Brief,
passim
(objecting only to agency's valuation of raw garlic bulbs); Def.-Ints.’ Reply Brief,
passim
(same);
cf. Taian Ziyang Food Co. v. United States,
37 CIT-, -,-,
. In addition, in certain market economy cases, Commerce may calculate normal value using the price in a third country
{i.e.,
a country other than the exporting country or the United States). See,
e.g., RHP Bearings Ltd. v. United States,
. Factors of production "include, but are not limited to ... hours of labor required, ... quantities of raw materials employed, ... amounts of energy and other utilities consumed, and ... representative capital cost, including depreciation.''
See
19 U.S.C. § 1677b(c)(3);
see also Dorbest Ltd. v. United States,
. As
Jinan Yipin II
explained, Policy Bulletin 04.1 clearly states that the five specified crite
ria
— i.e., “investigation or review period-wide price averages, prices specific to the input in question, prices that are net of taxes and import duties, prices that are contemporaneous with the period of investigation or review, and publicly available data” — were developed to serve as a “tie-breaker,” if necessary, in Commerce's identification of a surrogate country.
See Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at-n. 7,
. For a summary overview of Commerce’s intermediate input methodology,
see lining Yongjia Trade Co. v. United States,
34 CIT -,-& n. 6,
In prior administrative reviews, Commerce used the agency’s standard upstream "factors of production” methodology, rather than the intermediate input methodology employed here. In those prior reviews, Commerce calculated separate surrogate values for garlic
seed
and other so-called “growing” and "harvesting” factors of production.
See Jinan Yipin I,
. The Market Research Report was first placed on the record of the eighth administrative review of the antidumping order on fresh garlic from China.
See
Second Remand Determination at 8 n. 30 (explaining that Market Research Report "was originally submitted on the record of the 2001-2002 administrative review”). The same Market Research Report was later placed on the record of the second remand in litigation involving the ninth administrative review, as well as the record of the review here at issue.
See Jinan Yipin I,
. Specifically, the First Remand Determination calculated the surrogate value for raw garlic bulbs using the Azadpur APMC data, averaging the values for "A”- and "S.A.”grade garlic.
See generally
First Remand Determination at 9-15, 53-59;
see also Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at -,
.
Jinan Yipin II
found, for example, that “statements in the [First] Remand Determination reflect egregious factual errors, and demonstrate that Commerce does not understand either the meaning of the Azadpur APMC data or their limitations.”
Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at
•-■,
. The Second Remand Determination explains that Commerce determined that the numerous concerns about the Azadpur APMC data which were identified in Jinan Yipin II could not "be adequately remedied” in the course of the second remand proceeding. See Second Remand Determination at 23; see also id. at 7. In addition, Commerce has a practice in remand proceedings of relying only on data that were available at the time of the underlying administrative review. Here, the agency determined during the second remand proceeding that the Azadpur APMC data were not available when the agency conducted the administrative review at issue. See id. at 7-8; see also id. at 23. For both of these reasons, Commerce decided not to consider use of the Azadpur APMC data in the Second Remand Determination. See id. at 7, 23. The Azadpur APMC data have been used in subsequent administrative reviews. Of course, those proceedings have involved different arguments and different administrative records.
. For example, “[b]ecause the record ... supports] the claim that transportation costs could be double counted,” Commerce "removed] freight costs from ... Linshu Dad-ing’s input calculation in the SAS program in order to exclude transportation costs from the garlic bulb supplier to Linshu Dading’s factory in the normal value calculation.” See Second Remand Determination at 19. Because Jinan Yipin and Sunny grow their own garlic, they did not incur such freight costs. Accordingly, Commerce made no such adjustment for them. Id.
It is not clear whether (and, if so, how) the Second Remand Determination considered the Chinese Producers’ previously-expressed concerns that the Agmarknet data reflect prices that include, for example, the expense of transporting garlic bulbs from "farm gate” to market.
See, e.g., Jinan Yipin I,
33 CIT at
*1308
472,
. The Domestic Producers point out that, contrary to statements in Jinan Yipin I, the state of Haryana is considered to be part of India’s "long-day zone.” See Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 6 n. 9; id. at 17 n. 35.
. Specifically, Commerce concluded that— because "the record does not contain definitions for the six [categories] of garlic identified in the Agmarknet data”- — "further filtering the [long-day zone] dataset to exclude certain [categories], in an attempt to be more accurate, ... could potentially introduce unintended distortions in the surrogate value calculation.” See Second Remand Determination at 32; see also id. at 36 (rejecting Domestic Producers’ argument for further filtering the data set, explaining that "because the Agmarknet data do not provide definitions of the Agmarknet designated [categories of garlic], attempting to filter this dataset further by excluding three of the six [categories], based on unfounded assumptions^] could lead to unintended distortions in the remaining data”).
. See also Second Remand Determination at 32 (explaining that "of all the potential data sources on the record, the garlic grown in the [long-day zone] states as identified in the Agmarknet data[ ] ... reflects] the large-bulb garlic most representative of the [Chinese Producers’] sales of garlic,” and that "filtering for the [long-day zone] states in the Agmarknet dataset yields the most reliable surrogate value for garlic bulb”); id. at 23 (concluding that "the Agmarknet's [long-day zone] data constitute the best available information on the record to value ... garlic bulb”); id. at 14-15 (stating that the Ag-marknet data for the long-day zone states "reflect an average as broad as is available for the specific input in question because the values represent an average across the five Indian states that are known for cultivating the larger bulbs of garlic similar to the bulbs of the Chinese garlic producers”); id. at 15 (explaining that "[filtering the Agmarknet data for the [long-day zone] states results in a surrogate value for large-bulbed ... garlic grown in India, which is more specific to the Chinese garlic bulb”); id. at 21 (noting that "Agmarknet’s [long-day zone] data are more specific to the [Chinese Producers'] garlic bulb because [the long-day zone] garlic prices are for the majority of India’s large-bulbed ... garlic, which is similar to the garlic produced by the [Chinese Producers]"); id. at 10 (stating that "the [Agmark-net] data for [long-day zone] states ... represent the best available information on the record for valuing garlic bulb to establish dumping margins as accurately as possible”); id. at 13 (concluding that "the Agmarknet’s [long-day zone] data are the best available information on the record based on contemporaneity, representativeness, and specificity”); id. at 19 (noting that "the Agmarknet’s [long-day zone] data represent a reliable surrogate value for garlic bulb”); id. at 20 (stating that "the Agmarknet data filtered for the [long-day zone] are more specific to the garlic input” at issue).
. Language in their Reply Brief suggests that — rather than seeking to limit the data set to the "China,” "Garlic,” and "New Medium” categories (the relief sought in their opening brief, as most clearly indicated by the caption on page 11 of that brief) — the Domestic Producers instead now favor limiting the data set to data from fewer than five states. See, e.g., Def.-Ints.’ Reply Brief at 4 (arguing that "[Commerce’s] reliance on Agmarknet pricing data for all five of India’s long-day states is overbroad,” that "[Commerce’s] reliance on Agmarknet pricing from all five of the long-day states does not result in the selection of a surrogate that is product-specific,” and that "[Commerce’s] reliance on Agmarknet pricing data from all five of India’s long-day states to calculate a surrogate for input garlic bulbs is overbroad and is not supported by substantial evidence or in accordance with law”).
But it is much too late for the Domestic Producers to change their tune (if, in fact, that is what they were trying to do). To the extent that the Domestic Producers now assert claims and seek relief that may differ from what they advocated to Commerce in the course of the remand proceeding, their efforts are quite likely barred by the doctrine of exhaustion of administrative remedies.
See, e.g., Yangzhou. Bestpak Gifts & Crafts Co. v. United States,
. It is axiomatic that correlation does not necessarily imply causation.
. The Domestic Producers offer no explanation as to why, for example, the “Average Price” for “Other” category garlic (which the Domestic Producers seek to exclude from Commerce’s calculations) so closely approximates the "Average Price” for “Garlic” category garlic (which the Domestic Producers contend is large-bulb garlic and should be included in Commerce’s calculations). See Def.-Ints.’ Response Brief at 12 (table listing “Average Valuefs]” of "Other” category garlic as "1,171.35” and “Garlic” category garlic as “1,462.06”); cf. Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 8 (acknowledging that even the Market Research Report — which was prepared by consultants to the Domestic Producers — does not indicate that larger-sized garlic bulbs uniformly command a higher price than smaller bulbs); id. at 7 (same, acknowledging existence of "exception” reflected in "average prices for 16 months from Nov. 2001-Feb. 2003 for sales of each grade at the Azadpur APMC near Delhi”).
As Commerce has elsewhere explained, bulb size is not the sole determining factor in valuing garlic. Indeed, the Azadpur APMC Market Information Bulletin indicated that garlic bulbs with a diameter of between 40 mm and 55 mm could be classified as either "grade A” or "grade super-A” (presumably with corresponding differences in price). See Antidumping Duty Order on Fresh Garlic from the People’s Republic of China; Issues and Decision Memorandum for the Eleventh Administrative Review and New Shipper Reviews (June 11, 2007) at 12 (comment 2); see also, e.g., Issues and Decision Memorandum for the Final Results of the 15 th Administrative Review of Fresh Garlic from the People's Republic of China (June 20, 2011) at 11 (comment 3) (explaining that, "[djuring the course of past reviews, it has become clear that size and quality are important characteristics of the [fresh garlic] exported from the PRC to the United States”) (emphasis added); Fresh Garlic from the People’s Republic of China: Issues and Decision Memorandum for the Final Results of the 13th Antidumping Duty Administrative and New Shipper Reviews and Rescission, In Part, [of] the Antidumping Duty Administrative and New Shipper Reviews (June 8, 2009) at 15 (comment 2) (stating that, in addition to “the size of a garlic bulb,” factors that "noticeably influence price” include the "number of cloves” as well as "possibly ... a specialty garlic variety (single bulb garlic)”); cf. Issues and Decision Memorandum for the Final Results of the 12th Administrative Review: Fresh Garlic from the People’s Republic of China ("PRC”) (June 9, 2008) at 19 (comment 2) (stating that "size is not the only characteristic that should be considered in selecting the appropriate surrogate value” for garlic bulbs).
.In their brief, the Domestic Producers actually misquote the Issues and Decision Memorandum, critically omitting the qualifying term "mostly” (with no ellipses or other indication that the quotation had been altered). Compare Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 14-15'(asserting that Issues and Decision Memorandum states *1312 that " 'Desi' garlic refers to a variety of garlic which ... may be more pungent than Chinese varieties, but is also smaller in size ”) (omitting the word “mostly”) and Issues and Decision Memorandum at 44 (stating that " 'Desi' garlic refers to a variety of garlic which ... may be more pungent than Chinese varieties, but is also mostly smaller in size”) (emphasis added).
Properly quoted, the Issues and Decision Memorandum thus does not support the Domestic Producers’ assertion that garlic categorized as "Desi” is — uniformly, and by definition — smaller than the Chinese Producers’ garlic here.
. Contrary to the Domestic Producers’ implications, the names of the Agmarknet categories do not appear to be particularly descriptive. It may be tempting, at first blush, to attribute significance to the category titles "China” (which the Domestic Producers agree should be included in Commerce’s calculations) and "Desi” (which the Domestic Producers contend should be excluded). But what of the titles of the other four Agmarknet categories at issue — i.e., the "Average” and "Other” categories (which the Domestic Producers maintain should be excluded) and the "New Medium” and — the least illuminating— "Garlic” categories (both of which the Domestic Producers agree should be included in Commerce’s calculations). There is nothing inherent in the title "Average” to suggest that garlic so categorized is smaller than garlic categorized as "New Medium,” which is what the Domestic Producers contend. And is garlic categorized simply as "Garlic” larger or smaller than "Other” garlic? (According to the Domestic Producers, garlic of the "Garlic” category is large-bulb garlic, and “Other” garlic is not.) In short, on the basis of the existing record, it would be folly to read much into the titles of the various Agmarknet categories of garlic. What is missing from the record — what the Domestic Producers lack— is evidence documenting the distinguishing physical characteristics of each of the six categories.
. Notably, the Domestic Producers make no attempt to hazard an explanation differentiating garlic categorized as “Desi” from the garlic classified in other categories, including "Average” and "Other.” In other words, the Domestic Producers offer no explanation as to how, for example, garlic that is categorized by Agmarknet as "Average” or “Other” differs from that which is categorized as "Desi." In fact, the Domestic Producers do not even make any specific claim as to the defining physical characteristics of the "Desi” category-
. The Domestic Producers note that, contrary to a statement in Jinan Yipin I, "China” category garlic is grown in more than one long-day zone state. See Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 17 n. 35.
. See generally Second Remand Determination at 9, 16-17 (addressing, inter alia, Domestic Producers’ submission of documents concerning use of term “China” by Indian tea industry in attempt to prove meaning of term as used in garlic industry, and dismissing the claim as "speculative”); Def.’s Response Brief at 10, 12 (same); Pis.’ Response Brief at 5 (characterizing as "speculative” the Domestic Producers’ claims based on tea industry usage of the term “China,” and arguing that Agmarknet’s "China” category likely "reflects prices for garlic that was actually imported from China and is now being sold in an Indian wholesale market”).
.Significantly, the Domestic Producers do not now contend that Commerce should base its surrogate value calculation on the “China” category data alone. See, e.g., Def.-Ints.’ Brief at 11-21 (captioned "The Department Should Rely on Values for ‘China,’ ‘Garlic,’ and 'New Medium’ Varieties to Calculate a Surrogate Value"). To the extent that the Domestic Producers argued in the course of the most recent remand proceeding that the agency should use only the data for the Agmarknet "China” category garlic, that claim has since been abandoned. See Second Remand Determination at 9 (noting that Domestic Producers "advocate relying on the 'China’ variety subset of Agmarknet data”); id. at 22 (same).
. The World Trade Atlas is "a database of commodities using all levels of the Harmonized Tariff Schedule,” which "enables users to determine the value of a specific product and identify countries to or from which the product is being exported or imported.”
See Jinan Yipin I,
. The price quotes for cardboard packing cartons on the record of this tenth administrative review are the same price quotes that are on the record of the ninth administrative review.
See Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at-& n. 102,
.The sole concern that the Final Results raised as to the price quotes for cardboard packing cartons was the issue of "public availability.” Only in the First Remand Determination did Commerce — for the first time — raise concerns about the “contemporaneity” and "representativeness” of the price quotes. As
Jinan Yipin II
noted, however, no party objected to Commerce’s failure to raise those concerns earlier.
Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at-& n. 99, -,
. Among other things,
Jinan Yipin II
instructed Commerce to reopen the administrative record on remand, to allow the submission of further "evidence concerning the domestic price quotes and the Indian import statistics (as well as alternative sets of data, if any, that may be appropriate).”
See Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at --,
. The quoted language from the Second Remand Determination — particularly the phrase "under protest” — can be read as suggesting that
Jinan Yipin II
imposed an outcome or result on Commerce, and ordered the agency to use the domestic price quotes in valuing cardboard packing cartons for purposes of the Second Remand Determination. Nothing could be further from the truth.
See, e.g., Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at-,
In short, in the course of the second remand, Commerce here was free to use either the import statistics or the price quotes (or even some other data), provided that the agency properly articulated its rationale and supported its determination with substantial evidence.
See, e.g., Tung Mung Development Co. v. United States,
The quoted language from the Second Remand Determination also reflects a fundamental flaw in logic. In the excerpt, Commerce first acknowledges that Jinan Yipin II cautioned that a third remand was unlikely; but then — rather than putting the second remand to good use through further analysis and/or eliciting additional evidence for the record — Commerce elected to adopt the domestic price quotes (in lieu of the Indian import statistics). See Second Remand Determination at 23-24. This is classic non sequi-tur. As a matter of logic, there is nothing about the low probability of a third remand that counsels a litigant not to avail himself of a second remand; indeed, one would reasonably expect the opposite. In other words, one would reasonably expect that a litigant who *1320 understands that he may have just “one last shot” to give it his “best shot.”
. To underscore the necessary primacy of "product specificity,” Jinan Yipin II took the point to its logical extreme vis-a-vis the surrogate valuation of plastic jar and lids:
To illustrate ..., Commerce here could not reasonably base its surrogate value for basic plastic jars on Indian import statistics for umbrellas (for instance), even if those import statistics — in the words of Policy Bulletin 04.1 — unquestionably reflected "review period-wide price averages” and were indisputably "publicly available data” that were fully "contemporaneous with the period of ... review” and "net of taxes and import duties.” Commerce could not do so because, even if the Indian import statistics for umbrellas were perfect in every other way, the import statistics would not be sufficiently "product specific.”
Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at-,
. Although there was some confusion concerning the contemporaneity of the domestic price quotes, the record establishes that all four quotes predate the period of review by roughly four and one-half months.
See Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at- & nn. 102-03,
.
Jinan Yipin II
highlighted the fact that— although Commerce raised concerns about the contemporaneity and representativeness for the first time in the course of the first remand — Commerce nevertheless "took no action ... to seek information to resolve its newly-identified concerns ..., by (for example) attempting to clarify whether or not the price of basic cardboard packing cartons in India in fact does fluctuate significantly over relatively brief periods of time (or, more specifically, whether it did so during the period of review, and in the four or five months thereafter), or even the extent to which prices have historically fluctuated over time.”
Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at -,
And it is telling that, as discussed below, although the Domestic Producers placed the Indian import statistics on the record of this proceeding, the Domestic Producers have never affirmatively claimed that the domestic price quotes do not accurately reflect the actual, correct price of cardboard packing cartons throughout the period of review.
See Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at - n. 101,
.As
Jinan Yipin II
emphasized, "Commerce's ‘contemporaneity’ and 'representativeness' criteria have no inherent value in and of themselves.... [Pjrice data that are not contemporaneous and/or are not representative [• — as Commerce uses those terms — ] are by no means
per se
inaccurate. The ultimate question to be determined is: Do the price data accurately reflect prices throughout the period of review (whether or not those data are ‘contemporaneous’ and 'representative,' as Commerce defines those terms)?”
Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at - n. 76,
. As
Jinan Yipin II
noted, the suggestion that prices for cardboard packing cartons are subject to any significant fluctuation does not necessarily comport with common sense.
Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at-■,
Jinan Yipin II similarly challenged Commerce’s unsupported, broadbrush claims of volatility in prices for plastic jars and lids:
[I]t seems reasonable to assume that some commodities (or factors of production) fluctuate in price, seasonally and/or in response to established market forces such as supply and demand. It is common knowledge, for example, that agricultural produce prices generally tend to fluctuate based on seasonal availability, and that mineral prices may fluctuate in accordance with supply and demand. On the other hand, it is not at all obvious why the price of basic plastic jars and lids would be subject to appreciable fluctuation over the course of a single year {i.e., the period of review). And, contrary to Commerce’s assertions ..., it is certainly not obvious why the price of basic plastic jars and lids would be "highly susceptible” to fluctuation.
Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at-,
.
See also Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at-& nn. 74-75,
.As
Jinan Yipin II
pointed out, the Domestic Producers had an obvious incentive to affirmatively challenge the price quotes if they believed the price quotes to be inaccurate. Presumably, if the price quotes did not fairly reflect the price of cardboard packing cartons throughout the period of review, or seemed to be in some way distorted, the Domestic Producers would have been the first to say so. Significantly, however, although the Domestic Producers placed the Indian import statistics on the record of this proceeding, they conspicuously never sought to present any evidence to suggest that the domestic price quotes on the record were manipulated or are in any way not representative of prices through the duration of the period of review. Nor did the Domestic Producers ever make any such claims.
See generally Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at-n. 101,
Jinan Yipin II
made the further point that the nature of the four domestic price quotes at issue here should serve to assuage, at least to some degree, any concerns about potential "manipulation.” If one were inclined to forge or manipulate price data, presumably one would produce data that were more clearly decisive — in other words, one would generate a greater number of price quotes, and those price quotes would span the full duration of the period of review. As
Jinan Yipin II
put it, “[v]iewed through this lens, the problems that Commerce sees in the[] price quotes are actually indicia of authenticity.”
See generally Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at -n. 101,
. Indian tariff subheading 4819.1010 — the subheading for which Commerce has import statistics — covers gift, specialty, and many other types of non-packing boxes, in addition to the sort of plain cardboard packing cartons that the Chinese Producers use.
See Jinan Yipin I,
. That the values reflected in the import statistics are inflated by the inclusion of gift and specialty boxes is not in dispute. There is no question that the basic cardboard packing cartons that the Chinese Producers use are less expensive (and, in some instances, likely much less expensive) than the gift, specialty, and other non-packing boxes that are included in the import statistics. However, it is not possible to state with any precision the full extent of the distortion attributable to the more expensive boxes, because the record evidence on the quantity of such boxes reflected in the statistics (relative to the quantity of basic cardboard packing cartons) is simply inconclusive.
See, e.g., Jinan Yipin I,
. See
generally Jinan Yipin I,
That the values reflected in the import statistics are inflated by the inclusion of freight charges (particularly charges for air freight) is not in dispute. However, it is not possible to state with any precision the full extent of the distortion attributable to such freight charges, because the record evidence on the matter is simply inconclusive.
See, e.g., Jinan Yipin I,
.The situation would be quite different if the tariff subheading reflected in the import statistics were relatively narrow (and thus relatively “specific” to the input being valued), and if the effect of air freight charges could be reasonably estimated. Similarly, the situation would be different if there were any evidence at all on the record to undermine the reliability of the price quotes.
Here, however, Commerce itself has admitted that the import statistics include a broad range of products that are very much unlike the basic cardboard packing cartons here. And Commerce has also conceded that the import statistics are further distorted by air freight charges, though the extent of that distortion has not been established. In contrast, there is not even a shred of actual record evidence to cast doubt on the reliability of the domestic price quotes. On these specific facts, Commerce's policy preference for the use of import statistics over price quotes cannot prevail.
. See also First Remand Determination at 45 (acknowledging that "the Indian import data ... are less [product] specific” than the price quotes); id. at 70 (conceding "the inclusion of airfreight in the values included within the Indian import data”); Issues and Decision Memorandum at 64 (admitting that "there are many different types of boxes covered by [the Indian import statistics]”); id. (acknowledging that Indian import statistics reflect cartons imported by air).
. See also Def.-Ints.' Brief (offering no comments on any issue other than valuation of raw garlic bulbs); Def.-Ints.’ Reply Brief (same); Pis.’ Response Brief (same).
. Although there was some confusion concerning the number of price quotes for plastic jars and lids submitted by the Chinese Producers, the record establishes that there are, in fact, a total of
four
price quotes from
three
Indian vendors, in Delhi, Bangalore, and Mumbai.
See Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at-n. 62,-,-n. 77,
These price quotes are the exact same price quotes that are also included in the administrative record of the ninth administrative review — that is, the administrative review which immediately preceded the review at issue here, and the review that was at issue in the companion case,
Taian Ziyang. See Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at-n. 62,
. The quoted language from the Second Remand Determination — particularly the phrase “under protest” — can be read as intimating that Jinan Yipin II imposed an outcome or result on Commerce, and ordered the agency to use the domestic price quotes in valuing plastic jars and lids for purposes of the Second Remand Determination. That is not the case.
In the course of the second remand, Commerce was free to value plastic jars and lids using either the import statistics or the price quotes (or some other data set, if it so desired), provided that the agency properly articulated its rationale and supported its determination with substantial evidence.
See, e.g., Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at -- n. 97,
. See generally n. 33, supra (discussing extreme examples to illustrate overriding importance of "product specificity” criterion).
. Review of the record discloses no apparent reason to suppose that plastic jars and lids (any more than cardboard packing cartons) would be susceptible to significant price fluctuations.
See
n. 37,
supra; see also Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at -,
It is telling that, as discussed below, although the Domestic Producers placed the Indian import statistics on the record of this proceeding, the Domestic Producers have never affirmatively claimed that the domestic price quotes do not accurately reflect the actual, correct price of basic plastic jars and lids throughout the period of review.
See Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at —— n. 101,
Absent any concrete evidence (or even some sound reason to believe) that prices for basic plastic jars and lids fluctuate to any significant degree over relatively brief periods of time, the contemporaneity and representativeness of the price quotes are of little import. Even if the record evidence did establish that prices were subject to some degree of fluctuation, the record is devoid of analysis to indicate that any such price fluctuation would justify resort to the Indian import statistics (in light of the admitted flaws in the import data). Further, if it were determined that prices were subject to some degree of fluctuation and that adjustment were necessary to avoid recourse to the flawed import statistics, it might well be possible to adjust the price quotes to be essentially fully contemporaneous and representative, using a methodology comparable to that which Commerce used to deflate certain data for use in valuing raw garlic bulbs in the First Remand Determination.
See Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at- n. 104,
. As discussed above, the wisdom of Commerce’s general policy favoring the use of import statistics over price quotes is not at issue here, given the specific facts presented— that is, where the record establishes that the values reflected in the statistics are (at least to some extent) inflated and thus do not accurately reflect the factor of production in question, while, at the same time, there is no record evidence whatsoever to indicate that the price quotes are in any way distorted or otherwise inaccurate. See generally n. 43, supra.
. The Domestic Producers had a clear incentive to affirmatively challenge the price quotes if the Domestic Producers believed them to be inaccurate. Presumably, if the price quotes did not fairly represent prices throughout the period of review, or if they appeared to be in some way distorted or manipulated, the Domestic Producers would have been the first to say so. It is therefore telling that, although the Domestic Producers placed the Indian import statistics on the record here, they have never sought to present any evidence to cast doubt on the accuracy of the price quotes. Nor have the Domestic Producers ever claimed that the price quotes are in any way distorted or otherwise inaccurate. See
Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at-n. 71,
Moreover, as
Jinan Yipin II
observed, the nature of the four domestic price quotes should lay to rest any concerns about the risk of "manipulation.” If one were inclined to forge or manipulate price data, presumably one would produce data that were more clearly decisive — in other words, one would generate a greater number of price quotes, and all of those price quotes would be dated within the period of review and would span the full duration of that period. Viewed through this perspective, the seeming flaws in the price quotes are actually indicia of authenticity and reliability.
See Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at-n. 71,
. As explained above, the record establishes that — in addition to the sort of simple, basic plastic jars that the Chinese Producers use— the Indian import statistics for "basket” subheadings 3923.3090 and 3923.5000 also capture many different types of more expensive "specialty” and other plastic products.
See, e.g., Jinan Yipin I,
There is no dispute that the values reflected in the import statistics are inflated by the inclusion of "specialty” and other plastic products that are very different from (and more elaborate than) the simple, basic plastic jars at issue here. There is no dispute that the plastic jars and lids that the Chinese Producers use are less expensive (and, in some instances, likely much less expensive) than other plastic products that are included in the import statistics. However, it is not possible to state with any precision the full extent of the distortion attributable to the other plastic products, because the record evidence on the quantity of such products reflected in the statistics (relative to the quantity of basic plastic jars) is simply inconclusive. See
generally Jinan Yipin II,
35 CIT at - n. 81,
.
See generally Jinan Yipin I,
That the values reflected in the import statistics are inflated by the inclusion of freight charges (particularly charges for air freight) is not in dispute. However, it is not possible to state with any precision the full extent of the distortion attributable to such freight charges, because the record evidence on the matter is simply inconclusive.
See, e.g., Jinan Yipin I,
. See also Issues and Decision Memorandum at 66 (noting Chinese Producers’ arguments that, due to "basket” nature of the tariff subheadings reflected in Indian import statistics at issue, import statistics include "plastic products such as specialty hair products, slippers, and fiber glass that do not resemble the plastic jars” used to pack garlic, and that Indian import statistics include air freight charges); id. at 68-69 (conceding that Indian import statistics include products imported by air).
. See also Def.-Ints.’ Brief (limiting arguments to calculation of surrogate value for raw garlic bulbs); Def.-Ints.’ Reply Brief (same); Pis.’ Response Brief (same).
