Khaleej Times

US trade barbs bark, don’t bite

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washington — President Donald Trump’s administra­tion claims it has doubled America’s efforts to fight unfair trade, compared to Barack Obama’s presidency.

But a closer look at data from US trade officials’ efforts to counter the dumping and illegitima­te subsidies accused of hurting US companies shows Team Trump’s efforts appear to be lagging. The president so far has not carried out his most dire warnings on trade.

He has retreated from threats to scrap major trade agreements and on Thursday said he might even reenter the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p — which he withdrew from after taking office last year.

He has also temporaril­y exempted America’s largest trading partners from punishing tariffs on steel and aluminum, while his heaviest tariffs on Chinese goods have yet to take effect.

But since last year, the administra­tion has touted a blitz of one-off efforts to slap tariffs on a series of manufactur­ed items, industrial supplies and agricultur­al goods.

The aim is to protect American producers from the alleged dumping of products on the US market at below fair value and under purportedl­y unfair subsidies by foreign government­s.

Goods as varied as Spanish olives, Argentine biodiesel and woven sacks from Vietnam. Various forms of steel and aluminum from Europe, Asia and Africa. Strangesou­nding industrial chemicals little known to the general public like polyethyle­ne terephthal­ate resin from Pakistan and ammonium sulfate, used in fertiliser, from China.

All of these figure among imports the Trump administra­tion says should face added duties to protect American suppliers.

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross told Congress last month he was vastly outpacing the Obama administra­tion’s anti-dumping and countervai­ling duty cases.

“We have been running 70, 80 per cent more cases initiated than had been true in the prior administra­tion,” Ross said during testimony on the budget. “We have also completed far more cases than any administra­tion ever has completed. We had over 100 cases.”

These efforts can hit snags, however, at the bi-partisan US Internatio­nal Trade Commission, which is independen­t and has the power to block the administra­tion’s antidumpin­g and “countervai­ling duty” tariffs when it sees no harm to US industry.

To the dismay of US aircraft giant Boeing, the ITC in February blocked the administra­tion from putting duties on a $5 billion order of CSeries mid-range jets from Canada’s Bombardier.

The commission has also swatted away tariffs on imports of titanium sponge from Japan and Kazakhstan (with annual imports valued together at $145.2 million), sodium gluconate and gluconic acid from France ($6.4 million) and rubber bands from Sri Lanka ($2 million).

When these denials are taken into account, Trump’s first year in fact looks slower than Obama’s last. The combined annual value of imports in trade-remedy cases begun in Trump’s first year amounts to just over $6 billion, involving imports from 29 countries.

But in 2016, the US issued final anti-dumping and countervai­ling duty orders on $6.6 billion worth of imports from just 18 countries — almost $600 million more.

The amounts in question may seem small, given the $566 billion US trade deficit last year. Economists also say the trade-remedy cases are most likely a drag on the overall economy as they tend to drive up prices.

“That’s not the point,” said Peter Watson, a former ITC chairman. “They’re there to help certain companies and certain sectors through periods of unfair trade.”

The Commerce Department told AFP it had no control over determinat­ions by the ITC, which had produced only a handful of negative findings.

“It just so happened that one was an unusually large case,” a spokesman told AFP, referring to ITC’s decision on Bombardier. — AFP

 ?? — AP ?? Donald Trump talks to Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing. Trump’s heaviest tariffs on Chinese goods have yet to take effect. Trump has not carried out his other dire warnings on trade as well.
— AP Donald Trump talks to Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing. Trump’s heaviest tariffs on Chinese goods have yet to take effect. Trump has not carried out his other dire warnings on trade as well.

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