• Tag Archives tarrifs
  • Steel Tariffs Are Already Hurting Steel-Using Industries

    Economists and industry leaders predicted price increases and potential jobs losses after the Trump administration imposed tariffs on steel and aluminum. What may have seemed like rhetoric is now reality.

    The sneaky brilliance of the tariffs is that benefits are concentrated to a small, politically connected, and very vocal few, while costs for American consumers are widely dispersed.

    That fact skews the narrative, but meanwhile, scores of American businesses are suffering the consequences.

    Kennedy Fabricating

    The House Ways and Means Committee in April held a hearing on the effects of tariffs. Among those testifying at that hearing was Kevin Kennedy, the president of Kennedy Fabricating.

    Kennedy Fabricating is a company that uses steel and, according to its website, is “the leading custom steel fabricator serving the [telecommunications] industry in the southern U.S. and is a preferred vendor with numerous national cell tower owners, operators, and general contractors.”

    In his testimony, Kennedy spoke about how the family-owned business survived many economic hardships, including the 2008 market crash, but said that the steel tariffs seem like the worst thing to happen to the company yet.

    [W]ithout any competition, U.S. steel producers have raised prices over 40 percent. Why should we pay 40 percent more here than our foreign competitors pay in their countries?

    This means that a company in China can now purchase a raw steel beam from a Chinese mill at a 40 percent discount, drill two holes in it, and ship it to the U.S. as a fabricated good without a tariff.”

    Furthermore, he added, “it’s not just China. One of our Canadian competitors just went from a position of losing projects to us to now winning projects at our expense, because they can import raw steel to Canada without a tariff and purchase it 40 percent cheaper than we can from our own domestic suppliers.”

    Kennedy Fabricating isn’t the only company being hit hard. In fact, many companies are appealing to the government for exemptions from the tariffs.

    Coalition Building

    So many companies are being affected that many of them joined forces to form the Coalition of American Metal Manufacturers and Users. The coalition’s spokesman, Paul Nathanson, explained the problems with the new tariffs:

    These tariffs will do nothing to uphold their stated purpose of protecting U.S. national security. They will instead hurt U.S. manufacturers in the near term by raising the price of the essential inputs they need to make finished products, and do long-term harm to domestic steel producers by eroding their own customer base.”

    Another group similar to the Coalition of American Metal Manufacturers and Users had the opportunity to make its voice heard at the Ways and Means Committee hearing. The Motor & Equipment Manufacturers Association comprises more than 1,000 companies that manufacture vehicle parts.

    Ann Wilson, senior vice president of the association, testified about the tariff-exclusion application process and the issues companies have experienced:

    “The [exclusion] process is already creating significant burdens on these companies,” Wilson said. “The exclusion-request process lacks transparency and will be particularly burdensome for small manufacturers. It is unbalanced and appears to not allow for successful outcomes for downstream users.

    The process established by the Commerce Department penalizes American companies for using imported goods as inputs, even if the source country is a free-trade partner and the imports in question are being sold at market value.

    Let’s hope that the Trump administration will heed these companies’ warnings and put an end to these ineffective and dangerous tariffs soon.

    Reprinted from The Daily Signal. 


    Tori Whiting

    Tori Whiting is a research associate in the Center for Free Markets and Regulatory Reform at The Heritage Foundation.

    This article was originally published on FEE.org. Read the original article.



  • Trump’s Lumber Tariffs Hurt Hurricane Recovery

    As the flood waters from Hurricane Harvey dry up, the residents of affected areas are turning to the task of rebuilding their storm-ravaged communities.

    Early estimates of the damage suggest they have their work cut out for them. The Texas Division of Emergency Management reports that the storm destroyed 9,407 single family homes. Another 44,013 experienced major damage. Moody’s Analytics estimates that the cost of the hurricane will be in the $51–$75 billion range.

    President Donald Trump has pledged $1 million of his own money to Harvey relief efforts, along with a $15 billion aid package for areas affected by the storm. But he’s also pushing protectionist policies that will raise the cost of the basic building materials, making recovery a longer, more difficult, and more expensive process.

    The Price of Protectionism

    In April, the Trump administration imposed countervailing trade duties averaging 20 percent on imported softwood Canadian lumber, a common material in home construction. In June, he hit them again with anti-dumping duties of 6 percent.

    The initial application of these tariffs aggravated consumers of Canadian lumber, says Kevin Mason, managing director of ERA Forest Products Research (a timber market analyst firm), and the damage done by the storm has only made those consumers’ situation worse.

    “Some people who’ve just gone through this devastation—they’ve had their house flooded or it’s been destroyed,” Mason says. “To the degree that they’ve got to go out and get lumber to do some repairs, they’re going to be paying close to record high prices. And part of the reason prices are as high as they are is because of these duties.”

    Tariffs Are Hurting Importers

    The U.S. has imposed tariffs on Canadian lumber imports periodically since the mid-1980s. What makes the latest round of tariffs unusual, Macon says, is the degree to which U.S. consumers have eaten the costs of those trade barriers.

    “Historically the Canadians have had to absorb half if not the bulk of the duties,” says Mason. “This time the U.S. consumer has borne the entire brunt.”

    According to a pricing index put out by the timber market publication Random Lengths, lumber prices hit a peak of $430 per thousand feet of board in April, the month countervailing duties were first imposed. That’s 20 percent over where lumber prices were in January, and nearly 25 percent higher than where prices were in April 2016.

    The increase has not gone unnoticed by builders, including those in areas affected by Hurricane Harvey.

    “A lot of our distributors, and lumber companies that we deal with, were buying a lot of that imported lumber because they got a much better price, and that rolls over into the prices that we pay,” says Patrick Mayhan, vice president of purchasing for the Houston-area company Westin Homes.

    That dependence on cheaper Canadian lumber meant that Mayhan’s company was particularly vulnerable to Trump’s tariffs.

    “It was a significant hike at the time. It was a 20 percent increase,” he tells Reason, adding that “we had no choice but to pass that along to our retail pricing for the home. And that’s a significant amount, because lumber is a big part of the cost of building a home.”

    Adding Insult to Injury

    Increased demand from the storm would push up prices regardless. But thanks to the tariffs, that price increase is starting from an artificially inflated baseline. For some, that could be the difference between a new home and no home at all.

    “Currently for each $1,000 that you tack on to the price of a new home, about 150,000 people nationwide can no longer afford homeownership,” says David Logan, director of tax policy analysis for the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB). Logan says the tariffs have increased the costs of lumber for NAHB members by 15 to 20 percent, increasing the cost of a new home by some $1,700.

    Zoltan van Heyningen, executive director of the pro-tariff U.S. Lumber Coalition, disputes the numbers coming from the NAHB, saying the impact of tariffs on home prices and homeownership has been overhyped.

    “The impact on consumers is negligible to none. The impact on producers is life or death,” he tells Reason.

    But builders like Mayhan are quickly approaching the point where they cannot pass added costs onto the purchasers of homes. Though it’s still too early to tell, the expected price increases coming in the wake of Hurricanes Harvey and Irma might push them past that point.

    For some builders, that pressure to contain retail prices will lead them to compensate for higher lumber prices with lower profit margins. For others, particularly those operating at lower margins, reduced returns might mean forgoing new construction projects.

    That’s particularly true for people planning to rebuild in the aftermath of Harvey and Irma. In addition to near-record-high lumber prices, the costs of other materials—drywall, sheetrock, siding—have gone up as well.

    Trump told reporters recently that the response to the recent storms is “gonna cost a lot of money.” Without his tariffs on imported lumber, the cost could be considerably less.

    Reprinted from Reason


    Christian Britschgi

    Christian Britschgi is a reporter for Arizona Watchdog.

    This article was originally published on FEE.org. Read the original article.