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Economy
Clinton administration moves to impose punitive tariffs on
Japanese, Brazilian steel imports
By Shannon Jones
17 February 1999
In a sign of mounting global economic tensions, the Clinton
administration has formally declared Japan and Brazil guilty of
dumping under-priced steel on the American market and announced
the imposition of prohibitive duties against those countries'
steel exports.
On February 12 the US Commerce Department announced preliminary
duties of between 25 and 71 percent on imports from Brazil and
Japan of hot rolled steel. The ruling means that importers of
Japanese and Brazilian steel must pay deposits or post bonds to
the US Customs Service. Actual collection of the duties will not
begin until a final determination is made by the Commerce Department
on April 28. However Commerce Secretary William Daley has said
he will invoke special powers permitting him to levy duties retroactive
to November.
The action stems from a complaint filed by American steel companies
and the United Steelworkers union last September, accusing Brazil,
Japan and Russia of selling their products below cost. The dispute
centered around hot rolled steel, which is used in a wide variety
of manufacturing processes including automobile production and
appliance manufacturing. US steelmakers have blamed a recent increase
in steel imports for lower sales and depressed profits. The three
countries account for approximately 35 percent of foreign steel
imports.
Action is expected this week against cut-to-length plate steel.
Complaints have also been filed against imports of stainless steel.
The countries targeted for import restrictions are among those
that have been hardest hit by the global economic crisis. Russia
suffered an economic meltdown last summer while Brazil has been
forced to carry out a huge devaluation of its currency. Meanwhile
Japan is trying to avert the collapse of its banking system. With
demand for steel and other commodities falling worldwide, the
United States remains as the only major market for countries seeking
to revive their economies through exports.
Imposition of the tariff means the effective elimination of
Japanese and Brazilian steel imports from the US market. Reaction
from Japanese steel makers was swift and angry. Fujio Ono, president
of NKK Corp's NKK America division, said, "Japan's 1998 steel
exports were the result of market conditions, and the market,
not government-imposed restrictions, should dictate future US-Japan
steel trade." He called the tariff "unjustified, ill-conceived
and counterproductive."
The Commerce Department excluded Russia from trade sanctions,
yielding to fears that the imposition of tariffs could deal a
death blow to that country's economy, threatening world financial
stability. Steel exports are one of Russia's few sources of hard
currency. The Clinton administration is seeking to force the Russian
government to limit steel shipments to the US and agree to price
its steel at $285 a ton, above the average US price of $250 a
ton.
The decision to exclude Russia from the steel tariff angered
steel producers and the extreme protectionist faction in Congress.
The Clinton administration announcement was seen as a move to
head off more aggressive trade measures, such as a bill proposed
by congressman Peter Visclosky (D-Ind.) that would freeze imports
at the July 1997 level. The Visclosky bill has gained the backing
of House Republicans, who are calling on Speaker Dennis Hastert
to bring it up for immediate consideration. Steel executives are
calling for even more drastic measures, including the banning
of all steel imports, the so-called "special 201" case.
Echoing the steel bosses, United Steelworkers President George
Becker denounced the Clinton administration measures as inadequate.
"Getting those countries to cut back on one product line
after they have robbed us blind for 15 months doesn't mean the
crisis is over," he declared.
Becker has been named along with business executives and academics
to a congressional panel to study the US trade deficit. The Trade
Deficit Review Commission is supposed to review ways to reduce
the US trade deficit, currently $300 billion annually.
On February 11 the USWA president appeared on a joint platform
in Washington DC with Bethlehem Steel President Hank Barnette
and several Congressional Democrats and Republicans at a rally
called to press the Clinton administration to step up action against
foreign steel producers. Becker, who along with his fellow officials
in the AFL-CIO has collaborated in the destruction of hundreds
of thousands of jobs in basic industry, joined with other speakers
in attempting to shift the blame for job insecurity and falling
living standards of American workers to the overseas rivals of
American capitalism.
See Also:
Japanese finance minister attacks
"Washington consensus"
[26 January 1999]
US threatens
sanctions against Europe and steel exporters
International trade tensions grow
[14 November 1998]
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