The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

No decision yet on steel tariffs

Action against foreign steel among Trump’s campaign promises

- By Josh Boak and Paul Wiseman AP Economics Writers

President Donald Trump pledged during the campaign to help U.S. factory workers by slapping tariffs on foreign steel. But his long-awaited decision on the issue is running behind schedule and administra­tion officials are leaving plenty of wiggle room on what direction he’ll take.

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross initially hoped to finish a report on tariffs last month, but his department has been holding off as the Pentagon weighs in about impact of steel tariffs on national security. The delay is an example of the difficulty Trump faces in delivering on his ambitious policy agenda — on taxes, health insurance and more — as quickly as he told voters he could.

White House officials have hinted that tariffs still are coming. Asked on “Fox News Sunday” over the weekend if the president planned to impose sanctions on foreign steel, White House chief of staff Reince Priebus responded: “My guess is that he will because he promised he would.”

There are trade-offs from taxing foreign steel that include higher prices for consumers and manufactur­ers that rely on steel, as well as strained relationsh­ips with trade partners. The possible risks became more apparent last week at the summit of the 20 leading rich and developing nations in Germany. The summit ended

with a declaratio­n that government­s would develop “concrete policy solutions that reduce steel excess capacity” by November 2017, but the U.S. position was aggressive enough that there were concerns about a potential trade war.

Supporters of the tariffs say the move would help crack down on excess steelmakin­g by China. Opponents say it would raise prices for consumers and manufactur­ers that turn steel into cars, furniture and other products.

Scott Paul, president of the Alliance for American Manufactur­ing, supports higher steel tariffs but notes that the initial timeline set by the administra­tion was “very ambitious.” He says that tariffs could help domestic steel mills while encouragin­g other countries to take similar moves against China.

Paul said that some officials and advocacy groups have slowed the process to fine-tune the policy, while others are hoping that a slower pace of discussion­s will derail the debate. He said he trusts that “at the conclusion of the process, there will be a well thoughtout rationale for whatever relief is provided.”

In April, Trump asked the Commerce Department to launch an investigat­ion into whether foreign steel imports posed a threat to national security, on the grounds that the American military relies on steel for airplanes, ships and other equipment. Steel also goes into roads, bridges and other critical infrastruc­ture.

The investigat­ion reflects the administra­tion’s determinat­ion to use existing trade laws more aggressive­ly to combat what it sees as unfair practices by U.S. trading partners. Restrictin­g steel imports, it reasoned, would help restore U.S. manufactur­ing jobs and reduce an American trade deficit that came in at $502 billion last year.

The administra­tion’s trade team is heavy with steel industry veterans: U.S. Trade Rep. Robert Lighthizer represente­d U.S. steelmaker­s as a Washington trade attorney. As a private investor, Ross, the commerce secretary, bought and turned around several bankrupt steel companies.

But the Pentagon is also providing its own input on the issue while the Commerce Department’s report has yet to be finalized.

To critics, the administra­tion’s national security case against steel imports looks shaky. The American military does not appear critically dependent on steel imports. The U.S. produces 70 percent of the steel it consumes. And just 3 percent of steel shipments go to national defense or homeland security, according to the American Iron and Steel Institute.

Many of the steel industry’s troubles can be traced to low prices resulting from massive overproduc­tion by China, which churns out nearly half the world’s steel. But the United States has already put up big barriers to Chinese steel imports. So any restrictio­ns or tariffs on steel would land elsewhere — on U.S. ally Canada (which supplies 17 percent of U.S. steel imports), Brazil (13 percent) and South Korea (12 percent).

“If we were to impose tariffs and quotas because of the Chinese problems, but we really hit our friends and allies — then how does all this advance our interests?” says Amanda DeBusk, head of the internatio­nal trade department at the law firm of Hughes Hubbard & Reed.

Then there are America’s steel-consuming industries, such as automakers and equipment manufactur­ers. They say they would be hurt if sanctions drove up steel prices. Daniel Pearson, senior fellow at the libertaria­n Cato Institute, says steel mills employ just 140,000 workers — a fraction of the 6.5 million who work for manufactur­ers that consume steel.

Stuart Speyer, the president of Dickson, Tennesseeb­ased Tennsco Corp., employs 650 workers making cabinets, lockers, bookcases and other storage containers made of steel. He said Tennsco recently lost a 50year customer who discovered cheaper prices elsewhere and that new tariffs would make things worse.

“In an attempt to protect the U.S. steel industry, many more American jobs will inadverten­tly be lost,” Speyer said.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Cut panels of steel used to make blades to build fans for industrial ventilatio­n systems are stored on the production floor in Harmony, Pa.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Cut panels of steel used to make blades to build fans for industrial ventilatio­n systems are stored on the production floor in Harmony, Pa.

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