Arab Times

US proposes heavy tariffs on China, Russia amid steel, aluminum glut

Move raises prospect of retaliatio­n from countries targeted

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WASHINGTON, Feb 17, (AFP): The US Commerce Department on Friday recommende­d imposing heavy tariffs on China, Russia and other countries to counter a global glut in steel and aluminum which it says threatens national security.

The move gives President Donald Trump the opportunit­y to strike a highly public blow for his “America first” trade policy, but raises the prospect of retaliatio­n from countries targeted and was sure to stoke fears of a trade war.

In two reports submitted to the president last month and made public on Friday, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross laid out an array of possible options, including a tariff of at least 24 percent on all steel imports worldwide, and a similar tariff on aluminum imports from China, Russia and three other countries.

Other options would impose either high tariffs or quotas on steel and aluminum imports.

Ross told reporters the principal question was whether cheap imports impaired US national security by making domestic production unviable.

“I have determined that they do,” he said.

Ross said typical US trade actions against dumping and illegitima­te subsidies had failed to address market oversupply, particular­ly by China, because “Serial offenders can evade these orders by transshipm­ent through another country, with or without additional processing.”

Trump has until mid-April to decide what remedies to impose, if any, and Ross acknowledg­ed that any US action is likely to be challenged by exporting nations in the World Trade Organizati­on, Ross said.

The recommende­d steel and aluminum sanctions address long-standing concerns about Chinese overproduc­tion, but take the extraordin­ary tack of framing them in terms of national security and defense.

The administra­tion of former president Barack Obama also sought to tackle the subject but emphasized trade talks with China rather than punitive measures.

And these proposals could hurt other countries more than China, which is the world’s largest steel producer but provides less than one percent of US imports and sells only 10 percent of its wrought aluminum abroad.

The report found 10 US steel furnaces have closed since 2000, causing a 35 percent drop in employment, while global excess steel capacity is seven times greater than US demand, largely due to China.

And since 2013, six aluminum smelters have been shuttered as well, with only two of the remaining five operating at capacity.

For steel, Ross recommende­d three possible options: a 24 percent tariff on all steel from all countries; a 53 percent tariff on imports from 12 countries, including China, Russia and Brazil; or a quota on steel from all countries.

For aluminum, he recommende­d either a 7.7 percent tariff on the metal from all countries; a quota for all countries;

or 23.6 percent tariffs on imports of aluminum from China, Russia, Hong Kong, Vietnam and Venezuela.

US industries have urged the administra­tion to exercise care since high import tariffs would raise the cost of supplies. But Commerce said the goal of the measures was to boost domestic aluminum and steel production.

Gary Clyde Hufbauer, a noted trade expert at the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics, said the steel report failed to address the costs to

the US economy of higher steel prices which could rise by as much as 20 percent as a result of the trade sanctions.

“GE, Caterpilla­r, Emerson, anybody who builds a bridge, they’re all going to pay more money,” Hufbauer told AFP, noting the proposals come as the White House is trying to spur a major renewal of US infrastruc­ture.

“There’s no talk about that burden,” he added. “You’re going to have highcost steel in this country relative to other countries.”

 ?? (AFP) ?? Indian Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) officials escort Gokulnath Shetty (center, grey hair), the former deputy manager of the Punjab National Bank (PNB) into a special CBI court in Mumbai on Feb 17. Indian investigat­ors have arrested three...
(AFP) Indian Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) officials escort Gokulnath Shetty (center, grey hair), the former deputy manager of the Punjab National Bank (PNB) into a special CBI court in Mumbai on Feb 17. Indian investigat­ors have arrested three...

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