The Phnom Penh Post

US places new duties on Mexico and China

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THE US announced fresh duties on some Mexican and Chinese steel goods on Monday, saying those countries helped their manufactur­ers with unfair subsidies.

The decision comes two months after US President Donald Trump agreed to lift tariffs on steel and aluminium from Mexico and Canada after the three nations agreed on a revised North American free trade pact.

The Commerce Department found that imported steel used in constructi­on benefited from subsidies in China, Mexico and Canada, but in the case of Canada the subsidies were negligible, so no retaliator­y duties were imposed.

The action was in response to a grievance lodged in February by US steel producers. In its preliminar­y findings Commerce found Mexican and Chinese exporters of fabricated structural steel benefitted from subsidies ranging from 30.3 per cent to 177.43 per cent.

Structural steel imports from China and Mexico together amounted to $1.5 billion last year, the Commerce Department said in a statement.

US customs agents will begin collecting import duties based on the subsidy rates, but the funds could be returned if officials later reverse the finding. The independen­t US Internatio­nal Trade Commission sometimes blocks Commerce Department actions if they find US firms were not harmed by the subsidies.

Citing purported threats to US national security, Trump last year announced global tariffs of 25 per cent on steel and 10 per cent on aluminium but in May agreed to lift them for Mexican and Canada.

Trump has hailed the tariffs, claiming they have breathed new life into a moribund but crucial US metals industry.

But the US steel industry has continued to suffer, with production halted at blast furnaces last month and overall employment edging downward at mills and foundries.

 ?? TERNIUM INDUSTRIAL CENTER/AFP ?? Steel pieces at the picking line at the Ternium Industrial Center in Pesqueria, Mexico.
TERNIUM INDUSTRIAL CENTER/AFP Steel pieces at the picking line at the Ternium Industrial Center in Pesqueria, Mexico.

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