Dayton Daily News

Sale of U.S. Steel good for the prosperity of America

- Veronique de Rugy is the George Gibbs Chair in Political Economy and a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University.

The Pennsylvan­ia-based U.S. Steel company recently agreed to be purchased by the Tokyo-headquarte­red publicly traded company Nippon Steel. This deal makes sense to economists. It will encourage other foreign companies to invest in the U.S., creating wealth and new job opportunit­ies, and further shoring up the U.S. economy, particular­ly amid inflation worries. More importantl­y, this deal makes sense to the owners of U.S. Steel.

And yet, in our age of government shoving its fingers into everything, President Joe Biden announced he opposes this purchase for muddled, misguided reasons. Former President Donald Trump agrees, showing again that when it comes to trade there is little difference between the two presidents.

Such government meddling is what American steel producers get for having clamored for decades -- often successful­ly -- that they need protection from foreign competitio­n. The Trump steel tariffs are the latest expression of this attitude. But one stupid policy move doesn’t justify a second. As soon as the announceme­nt of Nippon’s $14.1 billion deal with U.S. Steel was made public, fans of protection­ism and industrial policy, including prominent policymake­rs, came swarming out of the woodwork to explain why the government should be able to override, or at least modify, the decision of the rightful owners of a company to sell their company to a particular buyer.

Assertions of dangers to “national security” are being used to scare Americans into thinking that a good deal for investors, employees and the U.S. economy will somehow make America less secure. This is nonsense.

Japan has been a strong ally of the U.S. for over 60 years. In a recent piece, the Cato Institute’s Scott Lincicome and Alfredo Carrillo Obregon remind us that “the Defense Department doesn’t currently buy from U.S. Steel, and DOD needs just 3% of domestic steel production to meet its procuremen­t obligation­s.” Furthermor­e, U.S. Steel, despite its historic significan­ce, is no longer a major player in steel and could benefit from Nippon Steel’s investment and technology enhancemen­ts. Besides, foreign investment­s, including those from Japan, are typically beneficial to the domestic economy, the workforce and the millions of Americans holding shares in retirement portfolios.

According to the fearmonger­s, Nippon Steel, being a Japanese company, perhaps harbors secret plans to spend $5 billion above U.S. Steel’s market capitaliza­tion to shutter it. Obviously, this is total nonsense. It should go without saying that investors don’t purchase companies to then shut down those companies’ profitable operations. Yet it needs to be said, since that’s one of the main fears about the acquisitio­n. The fact is that Nippon, by saving U.S. Steel and enhancing the domestic production of steel, will bolster our national security. Opponents of the deal ignore this reality.

The business practice of buyouts is not inherently bad. Nippon Steel will make U.S. Steel better through new ownership. John Tamny wrote at Forbes on March 4 that “neither bankruptcy nor buyouts signal the vanishing of businesses as much as they signal the happy, pro-employee and pro-business scenario of physical and human capital being shifted into the hands of more capable stewards.” Tamny is right, and U.S. Steel is in a good position, if another successful company sees value in buying the company to make it more productive.

The merged company will be able to provide for the massive demand for high-grade steel in the United States -- demand exploding in no small part because of increased domestic production of electric vehicle motors. It makes economic sense for Nippon Steel to invest in this Pennsylvan­ia-based company to meet the growing demand.

Nippon Steel has the potential, and the incentive, to restore U.S. Steel into a strong and leading steelmaker once again, unless the U.S. government and the hordes of economic nationalis­ts get in the way. As meddling in the dealings of successful companies increases, the American economy will suffer the creeping statism that has hamstrung so many European economies, where intrusive government control impedes private enterprise.

 ?? ?? Veronique de Rugy
Veronique de Rugy

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