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White House
launches national security investigation using 1962 law
© Bloomberg
7 HOURS AGO
by: Shawn Donnan in Washington
The US has
set the stage for a global showdown over steel, launching a national security
investigation that could lead to sweeping tariffs on steel imports in what
would be the first significant act of economic protectionism by President
Donald Trump.
The
decision to use a 1962 law allowing the US government to limit imports that
threaten its security readiness is intended to deliver on Mr Trump’s campaign
promises to bolster heavy industry and “put new American steel into the spine
of this country”, officials said on Thursday.
But it
risks setting off trade tensions with China just days after Mr Trump avoided
another conflict by backing down on a promise to label Beijing a currency
manipulator, citing in part its help in dealing with North Korea.
Mr Trump
called the move a “historic day for American steel” but insisted it “has
nothing to do with China”.
“Steel is
critical to both our economy and our military. This is not an area where we can
afford to become dependent on foreign countries,” he added.
The new
push on steel came as Christine Lagarde, the head of the International Monetary
Fund, repeated a warning that protectionism represented a serious threat to
global growth.
But Ms
Lagarde, who has been locked in a rhetorical battle over protectionism with Mr
Trump’s commerce secretary, Wilbur Ross, sought to reach out to the White House
by acknowledging a need for changes in global trade.
Echoing
some of Mr Trump’s criticism of the multilateral system, the former French
finance minister said there were increasing signs countries were violating
global trading rules. She also concurred with the Trump administration’s
recent criticism of Germany, saying that addressing Berlin’s trade surplus was
“highly desirable”.
Mr Trump’s
move on steel drew praise from both US industry members and labour
unions. “This executive order will give us the tools we need to lure our
companies back and [put] our people back to work,” said Leo Gerard, head of the
United Steelworkers union.
Mr Ross
said the administration was concerned that rising steel imports were
threatening US industry and its ability to respond quickly to national security
needs. The issue was particularly relevant now because of Mr Trump’s plans to
increase spending on defence programmes such as new warships that rely heavily
on steel, he added.
The US has
in recent years launched 152 steel anti-dumping cases, with another 25 pending,
but Mr Ross said the trade dispute system was “porous” because it allowed only
narrowly focused complaints against specific countries.
“We’re
groping here to see whether the facts warrant a more comprehensive solution
that would deal with a very wide range of steel products from a very wide range
of countries,” he said.
Any such
action by the US would be likely to hurt steel producers in Europe and Asia and
trigger reprisals.
The US
steel industry has blamed Chinese overcapacity for driving down global prices
and causing it to close mills and lay off workers. The industry is now
operating at only 71 per cent of its capacity, with imports accounting for more
than a quarter of the domestic steel market, Mr Ross said.
While Mr
Trump has promised a hardline trade policy since taking office in January, his
biggest action to date has been to pull the US out of a vast but never
finalised 12-country Pacific trade deal.
Most other
moves have been largely rhetorical. Mr Trump launched studies of US trade
deficits and Buy American laws, and while he has vowed to renegotiate the North
American Free Trade Agreement, thus far discussions with Canada and Mexico have
been tentative.
In a trip
through Asia this week, Mike Pence, the vice-president, warned South Korea that
the US wants to renegotiate trade deals that it feels have only added to the US
trade deficit, and Mr Trump has held early talks with China over a trade deal.
While those
initiatives remain in the pipeline, there have been few of the concrete
policies advocated in Mr Trump’s campaign that were central to his economic
nationalist message and helped him win industrial states such as Ohio and
Michigan.
The slow start
on trade has come in part because Congress has yet to confirm his pick for US
trade representative, Robert Lighthizer, which has frustrated an administration
desperate to notch up accomplishments in its first 100 days.
Mr Trump
said the steel study’s recommendations could come within a month. Mr Ross made
clear he believed the investigation would lead to tariff actions and what would
mark the first concrete protectionist moves by an administration that until now
has been more focused on commissioning reports.
“Only the
president’s actions based on those reports can show us his true colours on
trade,” said Scott Lincicome, a White & Case trade lawyer also affiliated
with the libertarian Cato Institute.
Chad Bown,
a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics and a
former economic adviser to President Barack Obama, said citing “national
security” on steel amounted to invoking a “nuclear option” in trade.
“This is
one more piece of evidence in the worrisome trend that Trump seems to be
turning over every rock and investigating each and every available tool
available under US law to stop trade,” Mr Bown said.
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