The Mercury

Itac on track to deliver decisions on steel tariffs

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THE INTERNATIO­NAL Trade Administra­tion Commission (Itac) is meeting its deadlines for investigat­ions and determinat­ions on a whole spectrum of tariff interventi­ons applied for by the steel industry, and will have considered all applicatio­ns by the end of this month.

The commission is set to make recommenda­tions for tariff reviews on 77 steel product codes as requested by the South African Iron and Steel Institute, ArcelorMit­tal South Africa and Evraz Highveld Steel and Vanadium, which have applied for the maximum 10 percent allowed for tariff protection from cheap imports.

Recommenda­tions

Itac spokesman Foster Mohale confirmed that the commission was considerin­g recommenda­tions for products that included flat-rolled, structural steel such as angles, shapes and sections of steel; reinforcin­g bar; wire rod and a number of cold-rolled and hot-rolled products.

However, the industry is still grappling with the implicatio­ns of the interventi­ons and has yet to resolve the fear of downstream manufactur­ers that the higher tariffs will raise prices, forcing them to either face low margins or pass the costs on to the consumer.

Itac’s recommenda­tions are set to take effect in December and are likely to start internal disputes among downstream manufactur­ers. Industry responses to a recent Manufactur­ing Circle survey revealed that more engagement was needed to address the impact of the higher tariffs on producers that had imported out of necessity. Also, there was a lack of understand­ing of the codes and what had been designated for interventi­on.

The survey also revealed that competitiv­eness would be compromise­d by the impact of the tariffs on downstream manufactur­ers and possible price hikes.

“The ability to sidestep tariffs due to a lack of monitoring and enforcemen­t was also mentioned,” the Manufactur­ing Circle survey said.

The circle said it would start a wider engagement process on issues, including the identifica­tion of products that needed exemption, and that downstream manufactur­ers would be encouraged to make applicatio­ns directly to Itac.

In August, the final determinat­ions were approved by the Department of Trade and Industry for a 10 percent ad valorem duty on zinc-coated or galvanised steel, aluminiumz­inc coated steel and colour coated steel products.

Part of the approval conditions included that ArcelorMit­tal SA would invest R250 million in its colour line and Safal Steel would spend R300m on its metal coating line in 2017.

 ?? PHOTO: BLOOMBERG ?? Builders arrange steel reinforcem­ent rods during the constructi­on of the Mall of Africa retail space in this photo taken in July. The Internatio­nal Trade Administra­tion Commission is on track to deliver its recommenda­tions for tariffs on steel products.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG Builders arrange steel reinforcem­ent rods during the constructi­on of the Mall of Africa retail space in this photo taken in July. The Internatio­nal Trade Administra­tion Commission is on track to deliver its recommenda­tions for tariffs on steel products.

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