China Daily (Hong Kong)

Nail maker feeling the pinch from steel tariffs

- By AI HEPING in New York aiheping@chinadaily­usa.com

It’s the largest nail manufactur­er in the United States, and unless it gets a reprieve from the Trump administra­tion’s 25 percent tariff on steel imports, company executives say it will go out of business or move to Mexico.

Mid Continent Nail Corp in Poplar Bluffs, Missouri, laid off 60 of its 500 workers on June 15, and the company plans to cut 200 more by the end of July because of the tariff.

On March 1, US President Donald Trump announced he would impose tariffs of 25 percent on imported steel and 10 percent on imported aluminum to save US jobs, effective June 1.

Mid Continent gets steel for its nails from parent company Deacero in Mexico. Deacero must pay the 25 percent tax for materials shipped to Mid Continent despite the steel being sent to its own company.

The last major nail supplier in the country says the tariff has caused a 50 percent drop in sales, an increase in its prices and has driven customers to buy cheaper nails elsewhere.

The company is in danger of shutting production by Labor Day unless the Commerce Department grants it an exclusion from paying the tariffs, company spokesman James Glassman told CNN on Tuesday. Mid Continent Nail is “on the brink of extinction”, he said.

Glassman said if the company isn’t granted an exclusion from the steel tariff, it could go out of business or move to Mexico, where it could buy steel without the tariffs and then export finished nails back to the US without tariffs, which apply only to raw materials.

“It’s obviously an option,” Glassman said about moving production to Mexico. “It absolutely is something this company does not want to do. It wants to save the jobs in Poplar Bluff.”

Elizabeth Heaton, spokeswoma­n for Mid Continent, said Wednesday that the company has applied to the US Commerce Department for a tariff exclusion for the wire it uses. Its request is among some 20,000 being reviewed by the US Commerce Department. In a June 20 Senate hearing, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said Mid Continent had filed its exclusion request only two days earlier.

Mid Continent produces about 50 percent of the nails made in the US, according to Missouri Senator Claire McCaskill. The company’s 2015 expansion in Poplar Bluffs included the addition of a new line, the hiring of nearly 100 workers and a $5 million investment. It is one of the largest employers in Missouri’s Butler County. Average pay for workers at the 31-year-old company is $12.50 an hour.

Mid Continent’s problems have directly affected SEMO Box Co in Cape Girardeau, Missouri about 60 miles northeast.

Jim Powderly, co-owner of the 48-year-old box company, said on Monday that he had to lay off four of the company’s temporary workers due to a downturn in business from Mid Continent. The company with about 35 workers has been in business with Mid Continent for more than 25 years.

Mid Continent is in a part of Missouri that voted overwhelmi­ngly for Trump in 2016.

One Trump voter was George Skarich, vice-president of sales at Mid Continent. He told The New York Times that he is so upset by the president’s trade policies that he is lobbying the state’s Democratic senator, McCaskill, for help.

“He ran on ‘Make America Great Again’, and the point was to defend and protect jobs,” Skarich was quoted by the newspaper on Saturday. “Now here is an action he decides to take that has the potential to cost 500 US citizens their jobs.”

State Senator Doug Libla, a Republican from Poplar Bluff and the former owner of Mid Continent, told Missourine­t.com that slapping the company’s US trading partner in Mexico with a 25 percent tariff without taxing imports on finished products is devastatin­g US manufactur­ers.

Powderly said, “I don’t believe the administra­tion had this in mind when they implemente­d the tariff. They were just trying to create more manufactur­ing jobs here at home.’’

While Mid Continent might face more job cuts and eventually close, about an hour away in Marston, Missouri, Magnitude 7, the owner of a shuttered aluminum smelter, announced on March 9 that it will restart two of the plant’s three production lines — one in May and a second one in November.

The company said that will give 450 workers their jobs back and potentiall­y as many as 900 with future expansion. That would equal the number of jobs lost when the plant shut down two years ago and filed for bankruptcy protection under pressure from rapidly expanding Chinese aluminum imports.

Now here is an action he decides to take that has the potential to cost 500 US citizens their jobs.” George Skarich,

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