CITAC STF: WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION RULING
ADDS URGENCY TO STEEL CONSUMER'S PLEA FOR PRESIDENT
BUSH TO TERMINATE THE STEEL TARIFFS NOW
Washington, DC: In response to today's World
Trade Organization (WTO) Appellate Body decision declaring the
Bush Administration's Section 201 steel tariffs contrary to WTO
obligations, Consuming Industries Trade Action Coalition Steel
Task Force (CITAC STF) Chairman William E. Gaskin urged President
Bush to terminate the steel tariffs immediately.
Gaskin stated, "In addition to the continuing
damage and job losses that the tariffs are causing U.S. steel
consumers, the U.S. now faces billions of dollars in retaliatory
tariffs by our trading partners. For the sake of the U.S. manufacturing
sector, it's time to end the tariffs now. Manufacturers need some
positive news and a quick end to the steel tariffs will help send
a message that the President supports American manufacturers and
understands the requirement that they be globally competitive."
Gaskin further stated, "The steel tariffs should
be rescinded for several reasons. First, they have already helped
domestic steel producers as much as they possibly could. More
tariffs will only hurt U.S. steel consumers more. Second, terminating
the steel tariffs immediately would work to avoid retaliation
from our trading partners. Third, terminating the tariffs would
help the overall U.S. manufacturing economy, and give hope to
American steel consuming companies that have been badly damaged
since the tariffs were imposed in March 2002 and will continue
to be damaged every day the tariffs stay in place."
The WTO Appellate Body ruling today that the U.S.
steel tariffs violate the WTO Safeguards agreement was widely
expected. "As the world's leader in trade liberalization
and opening markets around the world, the United States cannot
afford to ignore the requirements of the WTO system," said
Lewis Leibowitz, Counsel to the CITAC STF. "Our preliminary
review of the decision indicates that it is consistent with WTO
precedent in ruling that the U.S. violated the WTO Safeguards
Agreement in imposing the tariffs last year. Based on Article
8 of the Agreement, the EU and seven other countries would be
within their rights to impose restrictions on U.S. exports potentially
totaling billions of dollars, not to mention other countries that
did not bring a case against the U.S."
The WTO Appellate Body decision will become official
in early December. The European Union (EU) has announced that
it will retaliate on U.S. exports to the EU worth $2.2 billion
five days after the decision is official unless President Bush
ends the tariffs. Other U.S. trading partners are expected to
announce retaliatory measures as well.
President Bush is expected to decide any day on
the future of the steel tariffs. In September 2003, the U.S. International
Trade Commission's midpoint review of the steel tariffs showed
that the tariffs have cost the U. S. economy $987.2 million and
thousands of U.S. jobs. Numerous economic studies have also found
that the tariffs caused far more damage to the U.S. economy than
helped the domestic steel industry.
Said Gaskin, "By their own admission, the
domestic steel industry is healthier today as a result of long
overdue consolidation and a new labor agreement. Keeping the tariffs
in place will not cause additional consolidation or result in
new labor agreements. Instead it will continue to cause U.S. jobs
to be exported overseas, where companies can obtain global market
prices for steel."
Gaskin concluded, "Eliminating the steel tariffs
will remove a tax being paid by U.S. steel consuming industries
and avoid damaging tariffs being placed on U.S. exports by the
EU and other trading partners. The debate should be over. Any
good that the tariffs might have accomplished has been achieved
and it is time to end them."
The CITAC Steel Task Force is comprised of steel
consumers working to achieve the termination of the 201 steel
tariffs by mid-point review and reform U.S. trade laws and policies
to benefit U.S. steel consumers.