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| FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
Contact: |
Christina
Bucher |
| March 2, 2001 |
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The PBN Company |
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Tel. 202-466-6210 |
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"STEEL ACT" WILL KILL U.S. COMPETITIVENESS:
CONSUMING INDUSTRIES GO ON THE OFFENSIVE
AGAINST DANGEROUS LEGISLATION
Washington,
DC: Consuming
Industries Trade Action Coalition (CITAC) Chairman Jon Jenson reacted
strongly today to the introduction of a bill designed by the U.S. steel
unions and their allies in the U.S. Congress to protect domestic steel.
"We
are disappointed in this legislation, which could cause irreparable harm
to the U.S. economy," said Jon Jenson. "Consuming industries
in this country employ 50 Americans for every one steelworker. We, along
with American consumers, investors and workers, have paid to support the
steel industry for 30 years, despite its inefficiencies. The time has
come to find positive solutions, rather than provide yet another round
of trade protection, to help this weak and structurally failing industry."
"We
should be looking for common-sense ways to improve the competitiveness
of U.S. steelmakers rather than artificially restricting their competition,"
said William E. Sopko, president of Stamco Industries, a Cleveland-area
manufacturer of steel products and a member of CITAC. "My employees
and my business, along with millions of others, are threatened by steel
import quotas."
Rep.
Peter Visclosky (D-IN) and Rep. Jack Quinn (R-NY) introduced the bill
yesterday. Among the proposed protectionist measures, the bill would establish
a WTO-violative quota on steel imports, a $10-per-ton surcharge on steel
shipments and a government handout of $10 billion to the domestic steel
industry in the form of loan guarantees.
Steel
consuming industries include heavy equipment, industrial machinery, construction
and transportation equipment manufacturers, the metalforming industry
and the domestic steel industry itself, which imported approximately 10
million tons of semifinished steel in 2000. Even competitive U.S steel
companies have declined to put their full support behind the bill, noting
they do not wish to subsidize inefficient competitors.
Jenson said that major
U.S. steel-using manufacturers will lose market share and jobs if they
cannot obtain the products they need from competitive domestic and international
suppliers.
"How many times
do legitimately competitive, productive firms have to fight this battle?
It's absurd to introduce legislation that will put in jeopardy the livelihoods
of more than 8 million American workers to save the jobs of 160,000 in
an industry that has failed to modernize and take the steps necessary
to compete globally," stated Jenson. "The harm to consuming
industries and to the American consumer would far outweigh any short-term
benefit to steel companies or workers."
The introduction of
the bill comes only days after a WTO arbitrator gave the United States
until July 26 to repeal the Anti-Dumping Act of 1916, a long-dormant law
reactivated by the steel industry to halt low-priced imports. The WTO
ruled in a separate case that U.S. measures taken against Japanese steel
imports violated world trade rules.
Jenson concluded,
"The United States has been a leader in building our global free
trade system. Creating artificial barriers is not the long-term solution
for the internal structural problems of the domestic steel industry. These
barriers promise to create many new equally burdensome problems for American
companies trying to compete globally."
CITAC is a coalition of companies and organizations committed to promoting
a trade arena in which U.S. consuming industries and their workers have
access to global markets for raw materials and other imports that enhance
the international competitiveness of U.S. firms.
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