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| FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
Contact: |
Christina Bucher |
| December 18, 2001 |
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The PBN Company |
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Tel. 202-466-6210 |
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CITAC STUDY REVEALS ITC REMEDIES ON STEEL WILL COST UP TO 74,500 JOBS
NATIONWIDE;
EIGHT JOBS LOST FOR EVERY ONE STEEL JOB SAVED
Consumers Could Pay as Much as $4 Billion Annually
Washington, DC - The Consuming Industries Trade Action Coalition
(CITAC) announced today initial findings from
a study that reveals that the 8 to 40 percent tariffs on steel imports
recommended by the International Trade Commission (ITC) in the Section
201 steel investigation could result in the loss of tens of thousands
of jobs in the U.S.
The study, "Estimated Economic Effects of Proposed Relief Remedies
for Steel," shows that the ITC remedy recommendations could lead
to 74,500 jobs lost nationwide, including 30,600 in steel-consuming sectors.
The study reveals that eight jobs would be lost for every one steel job
maintained.
"This study proves again that tariffs on steel imports will hurt
the American economy and American workers. Every state loses employment
as a result of the ITC's recommended restrictions. Even states that may
temporarily maintain some steelmaking jobs as a result of tariffs will,
on balance, lose jobs. At a time like this, neither American families
nor the economy can bear that burden," said CITAC Chairman Jon Jenson.
The study shows that while steelmaking jobs would be temporarily maintained
through trade restrictions, far more jobs would be lost in other industrial
sectors, even in the Rust Belt states such as Ohio, Pennsylvania and West
Virginia.
The proposed remedies will lead to higher raw material costs for American
companies, as well as greater competition from imports of steel-containing
products - a devastating double hit on steel-consuming manufacturers in
the U.S. Most industries that use steel cannot pass on the price increase
to their customers. Many companies will either be forced to move operations
overseas, where competitively priced steel is available, or will be driven
into bankruptcy.
The study, conducted for CITAC by Trade Partnership Worldwide, LLC,
quantifies the consequences of remedies recommended by the ITC for American
steel-users and taxpayers, as well as the U.S. economy as a whole. The
study looks at two scenarios: 1) imposition of a weighted average tariff
of 9.2 percent on imports of the products found by the ITC to be injured
(low tariff scenario); and 2) imposition of average tariffs of 20.7 percent
on those imports (high tariff scenario). These analyses average recommended
tariffs over all products covered in the current Section 201 steel investigation
and do not include imports from Canada and Mexico. The full study will
be published on December 19.
"There are 57 workers in steel-consuming companies for every one
steelworker. For every single steelmaking job maintained, American consumers
would have to pay up to $451,509 annually. This is in addition to the
job losses and costs to the economy as a whole that go with tariff restraints.
CITAC undertook this study to give the Bush Administration more evidence
to consider as it reviews the ITC's recommendations. We hope they'll weigh
the serious consequences that special protection for the steel industry
will have on broad sectors of the economy against any potential benefit
to the steel industry," Jenson stated.
The study predicts that the ITC's tariff remedies are unlikely to provide
a significant benefit to struggling integrated steelmakers. According
to Jenson, "The tariffs recommended by the ITC would impact volumes
of domestic production without raising steel prices enough to bring steel
producers back to profitability. Why pay an overwhelming price in lost
jobs knowing you can't achieve your goal?"
The study also shows that higher prices and other inefficiencies created
by the proposed remedies would cost consumers between $1.9 billion and
$4 billion per year. The tariff remedies would also decrease U.S. national
income by $500 million to $1.4 billion at a time when policymakers are
looking for ways to boost, not slow, economic growth.
Robin Lanier of Consumers for World Trade stated, "Even before the
release of the CITAC study, consumers were writing to the Bush Administration
to voice opposition to new restrictions on steel imports. American families
are really feeling the crunch of the recession this holiday season and
they're justifiably asking what makes steel so special that it should
cost the American economy so dearly."
The study found that the proposed remedies would slash imports from 18.5
to 35.9 percent and could raise the price of imported steel as much as
20 percent. Even those steel-consuming companies that do not rely on imports
will face shortages of needed products at the same time they feel increased
competition from foreign producers of steel-containing products that have
access to competitively priced steel.
American steel-consuming industries include manufacturers of automobiles,
housing and commercial buildings, electronic equipment, appliances, heavy
machinery, tires, food processing equipment, oil and gas drilling equipment,
and others who rely on imports as components and raw materials.
The CITAC study, authored by Dr. Joseph F. Francois and Laura Baughman,
employed a state-of-the-art computable general equilibrium 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.
The ITC will submit its recommendations to President Bush December 19.
The President can follow the ITC's lead or develop his own approach to
remedy the alleged injury caused to domestic integrated steel producers.
Jon Jenson is optimistic. "The Administration can't revive the U.S.
economy and preach free trade while also protecting integrated steel producers
from their own competitive mistakes. We're confident President Bush will
make a decision that's good for all Americans."
CITAC is a coalition of companies and organizations who are committed
to promoting a trade arena where 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.
The Executive Summary of "Estimated Economic Effects of Proposed
Relief Remedies for Steel" is attached. The full study will be published
on December 19 and will be posted on the CITAC website at www.citac.info.
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