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| FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
Contact: |
Christina Bucher |
| April 19, 2002 |
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The PBN Company |
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Tel. 202-466-6210 |
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ANGRY USERS OF STEEL AND LUMBER KEEP PROFILE HIGH
Higher Prices and Supply Shortages Already Reported
Washington, DC - Consumers and downstream users of steel, lumber and
other imported products struggling as a result of trade restrictions imposed
by the Bush Administration took their stories to Washington trade professionals,
the diplomatic corps and Washington media outlets this week.
Jon Jenson, Chairman of the Consuming Industries Trade Action Coalition
(CITAC), spoke yesterday to a group assembled to discuss the impact of
President Bush's section 201 steel decision. Jenson stated that the 30%
tariffs recently imposed are "costing the economy significantly,"
and "jeopardizing international trading relationships."
Providing examples of damage to the domestic economy, Jenson said steel
users are being told that certain types of steel are not available until
mid-July or August and that producers are rationing their output, putting
customers on allocation. At least one producer has stopped taking orders
entirely. The resulting shortage is creating a "dramatic increase
in price." In the last four months, hot rolled sheet, widely used
by downstream users, has gone from $210/ton to $320/ton today, according
to American Metal Markets. The next increase is expected in July, and
if predictions of $350/ton from noted steel market analyst Charles Bradford
are correct, the price would reflect a 70% increase over the last six
months.
"For companies that can only afford a 10% increase in input costs
before they lose profitability, a 70% increase is devastating," stated
Jenson. "Steel makes up 40-70% of the cost of the products I'm talking
about. The steel price impact is enormous."
Jenson went on to describe two specific companies already hit hard. A
steel-using company in Grand Rapids, Michigan recently lost $6.5 million
in business and will be forced to cut jobs. Its long-time customer, located
just down the street, is moving production abroad to take advantage of
world-competitive steel prices.
Another company, also in Michigan, is laying off 200 workers because
one of its main inputs - stainless steel bar - is 40% cheaper in France.
Productivity at the French facility is lower, but the steel price differential
overrides the productivity factor.
Laura Baughman, co-author of the CITAC study "Economic Effects of
ITC Relief Recommendations," described the higher prices and supply
shortages in the steel market at a Washington International Trade Association
(WITA) meeting on April 16. Many have been put on allocation by their
suppliers, have seen prices rise 10 to 20% and have lost millions of dollars
in contracts to competitors oversees who have access to world-priced steel.
In response to a question about steel users passing on price cuts when
steel was at a twenty-year low (1998-2000), Baughman referred to the Consumer
Price Index, noting that the prices of both cars and appliances declined
over the period. "We're talking about the small businesses making
the automotive parts. They have to sign contracts with customers promising
5% price decreases each year. If there is any savings, it is passed on
to the consumer. Steel-using industries also were a powerful job engine,
bringing on 848,000 new employees between 1997 and 2000."
Susan Petniunas of American Consumers for Affordable Housing (ACAH) also
participated in the WITA panel and urged participants to express their
concerns to the Administration about impending 29% tariffs on Canadian
softwood lumber. Petniunas said the new taxes will add nearly $1,500 to
the price of a new home, pricing close to 450,000 families out of the
housing market because they cannot qualify for mortgages.
Consumers for World Trade (CWT) representative Robin Lanier chaired the
session, noting that individual American consumers ultimately pay the
bill for trade restrictions. For example, the annual cost to an American
family of textile and apparel restrictions reaches $700. As a result,
associations like CWT and ACAH have thrown their weight behind a bill
to improve the standing of downstream users, and therefore consumers,
in trade cases.
CITAC is leading the effort for passage of The Transparency and Fairness
Trade Act (HR 2770), which would create opportunities for downstream industries
to participate in, and receive more balanced outcomes from, the U.S. trade
policymaking process. The bill has two essential components: 1) bringing
downstream industries into the trade debate by making purchasers full
parties to trade cases; and 2) exempting imports temporarily from trade
remedy actions if they are not made in the United States or are in short
supply.
In addition to promoting HR 2770, Jenson said CITAC will continue to
educate American manufacturers, support exclusion requests and opportunities,
and continue to voice the concerns of downstream users caught in the fruitless
cycle of protectionism.
CITAC is a coalition of companies and organizations committed to promoting
a trade arena where U.S. consuming industries and their workers have access
to global markets for imports that enhance the international competitiveness
of American firms.
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