 |
Estimated
Economic Effects of Proposed Import Relief Remedies for Steel
Executive
Summary
I. Introduction
II. How
Did We Get Here?
III. Estimated
Impacts of the Proposed Remedies
Appendixes
Technical
Appendix
III. Estimated Impacts
of the Proposed Remedies
As noted, U.S. law
requires the President to take into consideration the national economic
interest before providing any relief to the U.S. steel industry. A key
question for the Administration and for other policy makers interested
in this investigation therefore is what impact the proposed remedies will
have on consumers, producers, employment, and economic output broadly.
Five
of the ITC Commissioners recommended a range of tariffs and tariff-rate
quotas; one Commissioner recommended quotas for most products and tariff
rate quotas for the remainder. Table 1 reports the volumes and value
of imports affected and the range of tariffs proposed. Again, weighting
the proposed tariffs by value of imports potentially affected, the range
runs from an average of 9.2 percent at the low end, to an average of 20.7
percent at the high end, excluding Canada and Mexico from the tariffs.
If the President includes imports from Canada and Mexico in the tariffs,
the trade-weighted range of tariffs would be 12.2 percent to 27.9 percent.
Table
1
U.S.
Imports, 2000, of Steel Products for Which the ITC Found Injury
(proposed tariff ranges in parentheses)
| |
Volume
(short tons)
|
Value*
(millions $)
|
| |
Total
Imports
|
Imports Excluding
Canada and Mexico
|
Total Imports
|
Imports
Canada
and Mexico
|
|
Carbon and
Alloy Flat Products (20-40%)
|
|
Slabs
|
7,259,814
|
5,402,489
|
$1,607.4
|
$1,171.6
|
|
Plate
|
950,768
|
782,844
|
398.4
|
311.8
|
|
Hot-Rolled Sheet
|
7,459,644
|
6,664,289
|
2,263.5
|
1,989.1
|
|
Cold-Rolled
Sheet
|
2,763,774
|
2,338,379
|
1,287.0
|
1,109.1
|
|
Coated Products
|
2,459,329
|
1,586,893
|
1,372.8
|
878.7
|
|
Tin
|
580,196
|
488,587
|
341.6
|
282.6
|
|
Carbon and
Alloy Long Products (10-35%)
|
|
Hot Bar
|
2,531,409
|
1,214,149
|
1,103.3
|
581.0
|
|
Cold Bar
|
314,958
|
233,940
|
243.1
|
177.3
|
|
Rebar
|
1,669,829
|
1,616,111
|
362.2
|
347.4
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
Carbon307.9
and Alloy Tubular Products (13-35%)
|
|
Welded Pipe
|
2,627,208
|
1,420,685
|
1,358.5
|
676.4
|
|
Flanges
|
135,399
|
100,592
|
307.9
|
200.2
|
|
Stainless
and Tool Steel Products (8-30%)
|
|
Bar
|
150,592
|
131,184
|
345.0
|
302.5
|
|
Rod
|
82,344
|
82,302
|
153.6
|
153.4
|
|
Tool Steel
|
86,550
|
76,398
|
177.6
|
163.3
|
|
Wire
|
31,340
|
31,028
|
115.8
|
114.7
|
|
Flanges
|
31,826
|
27,513
|
249.9
|
185.2
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
Total Imports
|
29,134,980
|
22,197,383
|
$11.667.6
|
$8,644.4
|
* Landed, duty-paid
value.
NOTE: According to the U.S. International Trade Commission, imports
subject to the remedy recommendations account for 74 percent of total
steel imports.
Source: U.S. International Trade Commission
This chapter presents
the results of our rigorous analysis of the likely impacts on the U.S.
economy of the imposition of 9.2-20.7 percent tariffs on imports of the
subject steel products in the first year of relief. [12] To be conservative, we assumed
that the President exempts imports from Canada and Mexico from the remedy,
meaning that the resulting effects on the U.S. economy would be less than
if imports from Mexico and Canada were affected. [13] We also assumed a “soft” economy
with unemployment, as described in the Technical Appendix (in essence,
the economy is “in recession”). The methodology and data used to conduct
the analysis are described generally later in this chapter, and in detail
in the Technical Appendix.
The results indicate
that imposition of tariffs on steel imports would have a significant negative
impact on the economy generally and steel-consuming industries specifically.
Simultaneously, they would provide very little benefit to U.S. producers.
Table 2 summarizes the results.
Table
2
Summary
of Results: Estimated Impact of Imposition of Tariffs on U.S. Steel Imports
| |
Low Tariff
Scenario
(9.2% Tariffs)
|
High Tariff
Scenario
(20.7% Tariffs)
|
| |
|
|
|
Impact on Economy
Generally(millions annually)
|
|
|
|
Total Costs
to Consumers
|
$1,922.67
|
$4,019.52
|
|
- Net Welfare
Costs (impact on GDP)*
|
$501.46
|
$1,429.25
|
|
- Tariff Revenues
Raised
|
$1,179.00
|
$2,093.97
|
| |
|
|
|
Impact on Steel
Imports (percent)
|
|
|
|
Change in Steel
Import Volume
|
-18.5
|
-35.9
|
|
Change in Steel
Import Prices
|
+9.1
|
+20.6
|
| |
|
|
|
Impact on U.S.
Steel Producers and Workers
|
|
|
|
Benefits to
Steel Producers (millions)
|
$242.19
|
$496.29
|
|
Change in Steel
Employment (number)
|
+4,375
|
+8,902
|
|
Total Cost per
Steel Job Protected (number)
|
$439,485
|
$451,509
|
|
Change in Domestic
Steel Prices (percent)
|
+0.2
|
+0.4
|
|
Change in Domestic
Steel Production (percent)
|
+2.9
|
+5.9
|
| |
|
|
|
Impact on Steel-Consuming
Industries
|
|
|
|
Change in Steel-Consuming
Industry Jobs (no.)
|
-15,304
|
-30,592
|
|
Change in Imports
of Fabricated Metal
|
|
|
|
Products
(percent)
|
+0.5
|
+1.1
|
|
Change in Imports
of Autos (percent)
|
+0.2
|
+0.4
|
|
Jobs Lost per
Job Protected
|
3.5
|
3.5
|
| |
|
|
|
Impact on Other
Sectors**
|
|
|
|
Change in Employment
|
-20,860
|
-43,910
|
| |
|
|
|
Total Jobs Lost
|
-36,164
|
-74,502
|
|
Total Jobs Lost
per Job Protected
|
8.3
|
8.4
|
* Total consumer
costs minus benefits to U.S. producers and tariffs collected.
** This includes jobs in agriculture, retailing, services, banking, transportation,
the ports, etc., which lose out when income losses in steel-using sectors
feed back through the rest of the economy (e.g., reduced spending on food,
clothing and shelter from unemployed steel-using sector workers), and
when steel-using industries use fewer service inputs.
Source: Trade Partnership Worldwide, LLC, Washington, DC.
In brief, we found:
The proposed remedies
would drastically cut imports. Under the low tariff scenario, import
volumes would decline by 18.5 percent, and by 35.9 percent under the high-tariff
scenario. Import prices would increase by 9.1 percent to 20.6 percent,
respectively.
Higher prices, reduced
availability and other inefficiencies imposed by the proposed remedies
would force consumers to pay between $1.9 billion and $4.0 billion
a year, and decrease U.S. national income by $500 million to $1.4
billion a year at a time when policy makers are looking for every way
possible to boost national income growth.
Steel consuming
industries would face greater import competition from foreign manufacturers
of their products as foreign manufacturers have access to more competitively-priced
steel inputs that U.S. steel users can no longer purchase except with
high tariffs. The volume of fabricated metal products imported into the
United States would increase by 0.5 percent (low tariff scenario) to 1.1
percent (high tariff scenario) and the volume of auto imports would increase
by 0.2 percent to 0.4 percent, respectively.
Steel
producers do not win much. Despite the large drops in imports, the
bulk of the impact affects volumes of domestic production, not price.
Under the low tariff scenario, domestic steel prices would rise just 0.2
percent as volume of output increases 2.9 percent; under the high-tariff
scenario, domestic steel prices would increase 0.4 percent and volume
of output, 5.9 percent. Steel producers score between $242.2 million
and $496.3 million in windfall gains from higher prices and volume. As
draconian as the remedy recommendations are, they would not restore the
industry to profitability.
Steel workers would
not have much to look forward to, either. The proposed remedies would
protect between 4,375 steel jobs (low tariff scenario) to 8,900 steel
jobs (high tariff scenario), at a cost to American consumers every year
of $439,485 to $451,509 per steel job protected. At employment levels
in the steel industry of 218,519 in 2000, tariff remedies would preserve
at most 2.0 percent of U.S. steel employment at great cost to the rest
of the world.
But
steel-consuming workers have every reason to be concerned. Higher costs
of steel inputs that they cannot pass on to their customers,
[14] as well as greater competition from imports of steel-containing
products resulting from the proposed remedies would result in a total
loss (across all sectors in the United States) of between 36,200 jobs
(low tariff scenario) to 74,500 jobs (high tariff scenario). Losses
of steel-consuming sector jobs would range from 15,300 to 30,600. Under
either scenario, eight jobs would be lost for every steel job protected.
Table
3
Job Effects of ITC Remedy
Recommendations
(number of jobs; SIC category in parentheses)
| |
Low Tariffs
|
High Tariffs
|
|
Total Jobs Protected
|
|
|
|
Steel
Works/Blast Furnaces (331)
|
+4,375
|
+8,902
|
| |
|
|
|
Total Jobs Lost
|
-36,164
|
-74,502
|
|
Steel-Consuming
Jobs
|
-15,304
|
-30,592
|
|
Commercial
Construction (15 less 152, 16, 17)
|
-2,514
|
-5,256
|
|
Chemicals
& Related Products (28)
|
-792
|
-1,567
|
|
Petroleum
Refining (291)
|
-9
|
-21
|
|
Tires
& Inner Tubes (301)
|
-40
|
-60
|
|
Fabricated
Metals (34)
|
-2,852
|
-5,688
|
|
Industrial
Machinery & Equipment (35)
|
-3,100
|
-6,102
|
|
Electric
Distribution Equipment (361)
|
-462
|
-913
|
|
Electrical
Industrial Apparatus (362)
|
-829
|
-1,638
|
|
Household
Appliances (363)
|
-522
|
-1,030
|
|
Electrical
Lighting and Wiring Equipment (364)
|
-1,035
|
-2,045
|
|
Transportation
Equipment (37)
|
-3,147
|
-6,252
|
|
Other Sectors*
|
-20,860
|
-43,910
|
| |
|
|
|
Net Jobs Lost
|
-31,789
|
-65,600
|
*
Includes jobs in agriculture, retailing, services, banking, etc., which
lose out when income losses in steel-using sectors feed back through the
rest of the economy (e.g., reduced spending on food, clothing and shelter
from unemployed steel-using sector workers).
Source: Trade Partnership Worldwide, LLC, Washington, DC
Every
state loses out under the proposed remedy recommendations. Table 4 presents
the job gain and loss estimates for each of the 50 states. Some of the
biggest net losers are states in the steel-belt themselves: Illinois
(job losses of up to 3,810, or five jobs lost for every steel job protected),
Indiana (2,230 total jobs lost, or two jobs lost for every one steel job
protected), Ohio (4,000 total jobs lost, or almost three jobs lost for
every one steel job protected), and Pennsylvania (3,300 total jobs lost,
or more than two jobs lost for every one steel job protected).
Table
4
Job
Impact Estimates by State
| |
Low
Tariffs
|
High
Tariffs
|
| |
Total
Gains
|
Total
Losses
|
Steel-
Consuming
Losses
|
Total
Gains
|
Total
Losses
|
Steel-
Consuming
Losses
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Alabama
|
174
|
-536
|
-234
|
353
|
-1,104
|
-467
|
|
Alaska
|
0
|
-41
|
-7
|
0
|
-87
|
-15
|
|
Arizona
|
12
|
-546
|
-194
|
23
|
-1,131
|
-392
|
|
Arkansas
|
98
|
-359
|
-177
|
199
|
-736
|
-352
|
|
California
|
137
|
-3,727
|
-1,389
|
278
|
-7,702
|
-2,779
|
|
Colorado
|
23
|
-521
|
-167
|
48
|
-1,083
|
-338
|
|
Connecticut
|
40
|
-563
|
-299
|
82
|
-1,151
|
-596
|
|
Delaware
|
13
|
-107
|
-42
|
26
|
-221
|
-83
|
|
Florida
|
30
|
-1,585
|
-429
|
61
|
-3,299
|
-865
|
|
Georgia
|
26
|
-982
|
-339
|
53
|
-2,034
|
-680
|
|
Hawaii
|
0
|
-104
|
-10
|
0
|
-219
|
-21
|
|
Idaho
|
0
|
-134
|
-43
|
0
|
-278
|
-87
|
|
Illinois
|
384
|
-1,859
|
-908
|
781
|
-3,810
|
-1,809
|
|
Indiana
|
659
|
-1,095
|
-650
|
1,340
|
-2,230
|
-1,294
|
|
Iowa
|
27
|
-470
|
-237
|
54
|
-963
|
-471
|
|
Kansas
|
13
|
-406
|
-195
|
26
|
-835
|
-389
|
|
Kentucky
|
112
|
-557
|
-274
|
227
|
-1,142
|
-547
|
|
Louisiana
|
22
|
-481
|
-180
|
45
|
-996
|
-362
|
|
Maine
|
0
|
-147
|
-47
|
1
|
-306
|
-95
|
|
Maryland
|
0
|
-549
|
-146
|
0
|
-1,143
|
-296
|
|
Massachusetts
|
18
|
-869
|
-326
|
37
|
-1,794
|
-650
|
|
Michigan
|
236
|
-1,846
|
-1,161
|
480
|
-3,754
|
-2,311
|
|
Minnesota
|
22
|
-733
|
-302
|
45
|
-1,510
|
-603
|
|
Mississippi
|
25
|
-379
|
-198
|
50
|
-775
|
-393
|
|
Missouri
|
49
|
-832
|
-397
|
101
|
-1,707
|
-792
|
|
Montana
|
0
|
-79
|
-13
|
0
|
-165
|
-27
|
|
Nebraska
|
11
|
-237
|
-89
|
22
|
-490
|
-177
|
|
Nevada
|
0
|
-218
|
-53
|
0
|
-455
|
-109
|
|
New
Hampshire
|
0
|
-184
|
-83
|
0
|
-377
|
-165
|
|
New
Jersey
|
44
|
-950
|
-294
|
90
|
-1,969
|
-588
|
|
New
Mexico
|
0
|
-153
|
-31
|
0
|
-321
|
-63
|
|
New
York
|
83
|
-2,011
|
-581
|
169
|
-4,173
|
-1,165
|
|
North
Carolina
|
32
|
-1,144
|
-522
|
64
|
-2,352
|
-1,042
|
|
North
Dakota
|
0
|
-76
|
-22
|
0
|
-157
|
-45
|
|
Ohio
|
760
|
-1,965
|
-1,107
|
1,546
|
-4,009
|
-2,204
|
|
Oklahoma
|
35
|
-401
|
-165
|
71
|
-826
|
-329
|
|
Oregon
|
38
|
-399
|
-138
|
77
|
-825
|
-278
|
|
Pennsylvania
|
699
|
-1,599
|
-697
|
1,423
|
-3,290
|
-1,392
|
|
Rhode
Island
|
0
|
-127
|
-49
|
0
|
-261
|
-98
|
|
South
Carolina
|
55
|
-563
|
-269
|
111
|
-1,155
|
-537
|
|
South
Dakota
|
0
|
-98
|
-36
|
0
|
-203
|
-72
|
|
Tennessee
|
67
|
-913
|
-490
|
137
|
-1,866
|
-975
|
|
Texas
|
168
|
-2,428
|
-941
|
341
|
-5,021
|
-1,889
|
|
Utah
|
46
|
-270
|
-99
|
93
|
-558
|
-200
|
|
Vermont
|
0
|
-74
|
-26
|
0
|
-153
|
-51
|
|
Virginia
|
30
|
-864
|
-295
|
60
|
-1,790
|
-594
|
|
Washington
|
16
|
-752
|
-319
|
32
|
-1,550
|
-639
|
|
West
Virginia
|
130
|
-169
|
-51
|
265
|
-351
|
-102
|
|
Wisconsin
|
45
|
-1,011
|
-571
|
91
|
-2,062
|
-1,135
|
|
Wyoming
|
1
|
-52
|
-12
|
1
|
-109
|
-25
|
|
TOTAL
|
4,375
|
-36,164
|
-15,304
|
8,902
|
-74,502
|
-30,592
|
Source:
Trade Partnership Worldwide, LLC, Washington, DC.
Clearly, in a recessionary economy, import protection that will cause
such significant damage to employment is not advisable. Moreover, steel-consuming
industries, many of them small-businesses, have been among a very few
job-creating industries in the U.S. manufacturing sector, even in recent
years. Between 1997 and 2000, steel-consuming sectors added 848,000 jobs,
compared to losses in the steel sector of 10,300 over the same period.
It makes little sense to hit hard one of the few manufacturing sectors
of the economy – steel consuming industries – that are creating jobs to
bail out an industry that is going through a much-needed adjustment process.
In an effort to protect a few thousand steel jobs, policy makers would
further slow economic recovery by reducing national income, and force
job losses in manufacturing in the very communities they seek to help.
About the Model
Trade Partnership
Worldwide, LLC, employed a state-of-the-art computable general equilibrium
(CGE) model to estimate the potential impacts of the proposed remedies
on the U.S. economy generally, and the steel industry and steel-consuming
industries specifically. CGE models are the tools of choice for assessment
of the economic impact of regional and multilateral trade agreements.
They allow for assessment of the effects on broad sectors of the economy
of protecting one sector, including interactions between sectors that
may result.
The model we used
reflects the interactions across the entire U.S. economy, rather than
just within the protected industry (i.e. steel) and its immediate customers. [15] The linkages between
sectors are both direct (like the input of steel in the production of
automobiles) and indirect (like the use of mining inputs into steel, which
feed indirectly into automobiles, and the use of both energy services
and steel in the production of automobiles). The model contains 15 specific
sectors: food; other primary goods; mining; steel; non-ferrous metals;
fabricated metals; chemicals, rubber and plastics; refineries; automobiles
and parts; other transport equipment; electrical equipment; non-electrical
equipment; other manufactures; construction; and services. The Trade
Partnership benchmarked the model’s data for national income, trade flows
and related data to the year 2000. [16] In modeling the impact of the
proposed remedies, we take into account the current economic climate.
Hence, the model includes job creation and destruction (i.e. unemployment)
as potential gaps are created between labor earnings and the value of
labor output across sectors.
[17] Throughout, we assume that Canada and Mexico are left
off of the remedy list. Total effects across states are based on detailed
BLS data on state level employment, combined with estimated effects at
the national level.
|
 |