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Steel decision threatens to spark trade war
By Nick Beams
8 March 2002
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The decision by the Bush administration to impose tariffs as
high as 30 percent on steel imports into the United States has
met with an angry response from steel-exporting countries and
warnings of severe consequences for world trade.
While it is not yet clear whether the measures, scheduled to
last for at least three years, will provoke an all-out trade war,
doubts have already been cast over the viability of the new trade
round launched at the World Trade Organisation (WTO) ministerial
meeting held in Doha last November. The Bush measures are being
seen as the economic side of the increasingly unilateralist foreign
policy stance of the US that has come into sharp relief following
the axis of evil State of the Union address in January.
In the words of a Financial Times editorial on March
6: It seems bound to fuel suspicions, particularly in Europe,
that the unilateralist impulses that other governments increasingly
discern in US foreign policy are now spreading to trade and economic
policy.
The European Union has already initiated action with the WTO
to have the US move declared illegal. An EU spokesman confirmed
on Thursday that it had started formal dispute procedures. Under
WTO rules, a member country that believes another is breaking
international trade rules must first ask for consultations over
a period of 60 days following which the complaining country can
then ask the WTO to appoint a panel to make an official ruling.
Japan, South Korea, China and Australia, all of which have
complained bitterly about the US action, could join the action
in the WTO.
But a final decision could take years. In the meantime the
EU has warned it will look at measures to prevent cheap steel,
blocked from entry into US markets, from finding its way into
Europe.
While the US claimed its action was in line with WTO regulations,
this assertion has been dismissed as having no basis. Under WTO
regulations a member country may impose tariffs if it experiences
a sudden surge of imports. However, steel imports into the US
have been declining over the past three years and fell by 20 percent
in 2001.
But US officials are insisting that competition has been unfair
for a long time. US Trade Representative Robert Zoellick claimed
the EU had handed out as much as $50 billion in support to the
European steel industry over the past 50 years. How can
they say with clean hands that this is a fair steel market?
he said.
Critics of the decision have said Bush was trying to appease
the steel lobby, comprising the major steel companies in alliance
with the steel unions bureaucracy, with an eye to winning
votes in the US Congressional elections in November. This view
was echoed by EU Trade Commissioner Pascal Lamy who said the US
was putting domestic politics above legal commitments.
The EU was the foremost victim of the decision,
he said. When the US is caught between domestic pressure
and respecting its international commitments, the former prevails.
In a reference to Bushs Texas background, he added: The
world steel market is not the wild west, where people do as they
like. There are rules to guarantee the multilateral system.
The measures will have a major impact on EU exports which were
worth between $2 billion and $2.5 billion last year. About two-thirds
of European exports to the US will face the full 30 percent tariff.
The only two countries to be exempted from the tariff increase
are Canada and Mexico because of their membership with the US
of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). China, Russia
and Brazil will also be affected, although not as severely as
Europe and Japan. The Australian producer BHP Billiton expects
that more than half of its $400 million worth of steel exports
will be affected by the 30 percent tariff while the rest will
be subject to a new quota.
Widespread criticism
While the EU voiced some of the strongest criticism, other
comments were only a little less severe. British Prime Minister
Tony Blair told parliament the new tariffs were unacceptable
and wrong. Australian Minister of Industry Ian Macfarlane
said: We are not going to lie down on this. The Americans
are doing what they always do, they put their own interests first.
A spokesman for the South Korean government warned that the US
measures would spread protectionism around the world.
Although it is not greatly affected, a Chinese foreign ministry
spokesman said he did not believe the decision was in line with
the principles of the WTO and the government would reserve the
right to make an appeal.
There was also critical comment from sections of the press
in the US, reflecting misgivings in American business and financial
circles about the economic consequences and fears that the move
could have political ramifications.
In a March 6 editorial the Detroit News, which speaks
for the auto industry, a major consumer of steel, said it was
a terrible decision that will undermine the
economy and Americas relations with key trading partners.
Expressing a widely-held view in US business circles, the editorial
said the steel industry as a whole was not ailing, only
large integrated steel companies. It warned that the decision
could have foreign policy implications as well. Even Americas
staunch ally, Great Britain, is threatening retaliation against
US products, as is Japan. This is no way to repay allies who have
steadfastly supported the United States in its fight against terrorism.
The Chicago Tribune called the decision spineless
and said it invites retaliation from European, Asian and
Latin American countries. It pointed out that the large
integrated mills faced fiercer competition from mini mills in
the US than they did from foreign competition.
A New York Times editorial, published on the eve of
the decision, warned that increased tariffs would hurt the
American economy as it struggles to rebound. The move
would cost far more jobs at companies that consume steel, such
as auto parts makers, than those it might save at inefficient
steel companies. Moreover, such brazen protectionism could plunge
the world into a bruising trade war...
While much comment has focused on immediate US considerationsBushs
desire to bolster the position of Republicans in crucial steel
states and the attempt to win support from Congress on other trade
measures, including so-called fast-track powersone
of the most important underlying factors is the recessionary trend
in the world economy.
This tendency is clearly visible in the steel industry. It
is estimated to have excess capacity of roughly 200 million tonnes,
pushing prices to 20-year lows. World demand for steel was 741
million tonnes in 2001 and is expected to decline to 736 million
tonnes this year. This compares with production of more than 840
million tonnes last year.
According to World Steel Dynamics, a US consultancy firm, the
outlook for the global steel industry is highly adverse.
Even if prices rose between 10 and 15 percent this year they would
still be below production cost for many companies, leading to
a worsening of the financial crises for steelmakers in many
parts of the world.
The implications of such a global slump and the trade conflicts
to which it gives rise were reflected in two comments published
in the International Herald Tribune.
On March 6 it reported: European officials warned of
retaliation against any US tariffs, in a threat reminiscent of
the escalating cycle of protectionism that followed Washingtons
imposition of the infamous Smoot-Hawley tariffs in the 1930s.
This was followed by a similar report the day after: Some
Japanese officials privately warned of a possible spiral of retaliation
similar to the one that preceded World War II. Many Japanese blame
a global trade war ignited by US-imposed tariffs for the conflict.
There is no suggestion, at this point, that trading relations
have reached the state of extreme conflict which marked the 1930s.
But the fact that historical parallels with that era are being
drawn indicates the serious nature of the US measures and the
marked escalation in trade tensions it signifies.
See Also:
Greenspan predicts US "recovery"
but sounds some warnings
[28 February 2002]
Enron fallout is spreading
[21 February 2002]
US layoffs continue to mount
in new year
[14 February 2002]
Claims of US "recovery"
look premature
[7 February 2002]
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