The Denver Post

Trump trade war is forcing changes at a U.S. factory

Howard McCray company in Philadelph­ia is slashing spending, leaving jobs unfilled

- By Christophe­r Rugaber

PHILADELPH­IA» Sitting in his office beside photos of grandchild­ren decked in Philadelph­ia Flyers jerseys, Christophe­r Scott shakes his head. Another email has come in from another supplier. It wants to raise prices to cover the cost of President Donald Trump’s tariffs.

For weeks, emails and letters have been arriving in a steady stream at Howard McCray, the small Philadelph­ia factory Scott runs with about 85 workers. It’s mostly bad news. One supplier is charging more for shelving brackets, another for electrical

switches, a third for wheeled castors. McCray needs those parts for the refrigerat­ed display cases it produces for convenienc­e stores and restaurant­s.

Since Trump imposed tariffs on imported steel and aluminum and on Chinese products, Scott, like many other American manufactur­ers, has had to rapidly switch gears.

He had been optimistic about 2018, with plans for hiring and investment in new machinery. He had hoped, for example, to replace two 30yearold machines that cut holes in stainless steel sheets with a newer version that uses lasers and works twice as fast.

All that’s now on hold. This year, McCray has slashed in half its spending on large equipment. Scott is also leaving four jobs unfilled and instead adding more overtime for his current staff.

“That’s what the tariffs are doing to us,” Scott, 59, said while giving a visitor a tour this month of the factory floor, straining to be heard above the pneumatic drills and hydraulic equipment. “We’re just going to delay it until they come off.”

Tax cuts that Trump pushed through Congress last year sharply reduced the tax burden on businesses. The administra­tion argued that lower taxes would accelerate investment in machinery and hightech equipment. Over time, such capital spending tends to make workers more productive and speed the economy’s growth. Yet Scott says that for his company, the higher tariffs — which are taxes on imports — have largely nullified any benefit from the tax cuts.

There is growing evidence that other companies are feeling similar strains. Business investment in large machinery and other equipment grew just 0.4 percent in the JulySeptem­ber quarter, the government said Friday. It was the slowest pace in nearly two years. And demand for computers, industrial equipment and other capital goods has dropped in the past two months.

“The prospect of a fullblown trade war with China and tariffs more generally are prompting some companies to delay investment­s for next year,” noted Diane Swonk, an economist at Grant Thornton.

The tariffs have also injected a new layer of uncertaint­y into Scott’s business. Right now, for instance, Scott is trying to decide what prices to quote for two potential customers he is pitching. Should he pass on to those customers the higher costs of the tariffs — or eat them, as he is doing now?

“If you price the tariffs in now, you risk losing the account,” he said. “If you don’t price them in, you risk losing money on the account.”

The stated goal of the Trump administra­tion’s 25 percent tariffs on steel and 10 percent on aluminum, imposed June 1, was to limit cheap imports and spur hiring and growth in America’s metals industries. In imposing the tariffs, Trump invoked national security: His reasoning was that lowpriced imports hurt America’s ability to produce items needed for national defense. Many critics have disputed that assertion.

Some companies have indeed benefited. Braidy Industries, an aluminum manufactur­er, has broken ground on a plant in Kentucky that it says will create 600 jobs. U.S. Steel is spending $750 million on modernizin­g a factory in Gary, Indiana.

But across more industries, higher costs for businesses have begun spreading and leading economists to predict slower economic growth next year. And Trump has also imposed tariffs on roughly half the goods the U.S. imports from China.

3M Corp., for example, has said it’s raised prices to offset the higher cost of goods subject to tariffs. Ford Motor Co. says the import taxes will raise its costs $1 billion through 2019. And Caterpilla­r says the steel tariffs will cost it roughly $100 million in 2018.

Trade concerns are among the factors that are rattling the U.S. stock market; the Standard & Poor’s 500 stock index has tumbled 9.3 percent from its record high in September.

Like many companies, McCrary both benefits and suffers from globalizat­ion. Scott has worked to expand his business to Canada; 10 percent of his sales now come from that country. He felt relief when the U.S. agreed last month on an updated trade agreement with Canada and Mexico.

On the other hand, the company produces a commercial refrigerat­or that Scott says Chinese companies sell for less than the cost of his parts alone. He’d favor a tariff on that refrigerat­or.

Howard McCray buys its parts from distributo­rs that acquire them from other manufactur­ers. If its American suppliers were to acquire their parts from China or some another country, Scott wouldn’t always know about it — maybe not until an email arrived announcing a price hike to reflect new tariffs.

“The source of where their factories are is very hard for us to stay on top of,” said Scott, standing before dozens of bins holding screws, wiring and electrical components. For many products, there aren’t any alternativ­e U.S. suppliers.

Scott holds up a handful of Chinesemad­e shelf brackets dipped in chrome. One of his suppliers now charges 10 percent more for them because of the latest round of tariffs on Chinese imports. And the tariffs are set to rise to 25 percent on Jan. 1. Environmen­tal regulation­s make it too expensive to manufactur­e them in the United States.

Scott decided to gamble a bit, and bought a year’s supply of the brackets in August, when he first heard the tariffs might be imposed. That decision could save the company money if the tariffs increase as scheduled.

On the other hand, if the Trump administra­tion reaches an agreement with Beijing before year’s end and the tariffs come off, Scott will have bought too many. Yet he has no alternativ­e.

“We are still buying Chinese,” Scott said. “If there was an American manufactur­er that made a shelf bracket, we would shift to that.”

 ?? Photos by Matt Rourke, The Associated Press ?? Minh Pham bends tubing at the Howard McCray’s commercial refrigerat­ion manufactur­ing facility Oct. 18 in Philadelph­ia. The experience Christophe­r Scott, president of Howard McCray, has had suggests that the impact of the tariffs is still playing out.
Photos by Matt Rourke, The Associated Press Minh Pham bends tubing at the Howard McCray’s commercial refrigerat­ion manufactur­ing facility Oct. 18 in Philadelph­ia. The experience Christophe­r Scott, president of Howard McCray, has had suggests that the impact of the tariffs is still playing out.
 ??  ?? Sarmad Eskandar, left, and Mustpha Damen work on electrical components at the Howard McCray’s commercial refrigerat­ion manufactur­ing facility in Philadelph­ia this month.
Sarmad Eskandar, left, and Mustpha Damen work on electrical components at the Howard McCray’s commercial refrigerat­ion manufactur­ing facility in Philadelph­ia this month.
 ?? Matt Rourke, The Associated Press ?? Christophe­r Scott, president of Howard McCray poses for a photograph at the company’s commercial refrigerat­ion manufactur­ing facility in Philadelph­ia.
Matt Rourke, The Associated Press Christophe­r Scott, president of Howard McCray poses for a photograph at the company’s commercial refrigerat­ion manufactur­ing facility in Philadelph­ia.

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