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June
27, 2000
Statement of James Antunes,
A.J. Antunes & Co.
Click Here to view his bio
Good morning, and
thanks for the introduction. As you know, I am Jim Antunes, from A.J.
Antunes & Co., in Carol Stream, Illinois. I am speaking both for myself
and for NAFEM, the North American Association of food equipment manufacturers,
of which our company is a member and I am a past board member.
NAFEM represents 650
firms that manufacture commercial foodservice equipment, such as stoves,
broilers, toasters, refrigerators, dishwashers, beverage dispensers, food
carts and many other lines of food preparation and serving equipment.
In total, our members use about 550,000 tons of stainless steel a year.
Our members employ about 60,000 men and women in the United States. Industry
sales are about $6.5 billion at the manufacturers level.
The rest of the world
perceives American manufactured foodservice equipment as being superior
to our foreign competition. While our equipment commands a premium price
in the marketplace, we still need to be price competitive. When we are
forced to pay an artificially high price for a commodity like stainless
steel, our foreign competitors are able to capture customers and we lose
market share. Ladies and gentlemen, when our members lose a customer,
it is very difficult to recapture that lost business. Our industry needs
to pay a price equal to our foreign competitors for all of our components,
including stainless steel, so we can remain world leaders in our industry.
Because of our leadership position, about 20 percent of all food equipment
manufactured in the United States is exported. That is a lot of exported
or re-exported stainless steel - that is, stainless steel exported in
a high value-added, job-intensive manufactured product. With 20 percent
of our industry's products exported, that means that 20 percent of the
jobs in our industry - about 12,000 jobs - are directly tied to exports.
Because of our success,
we have an increased need for stainless steel and an increased need for
workers. We have a technological edge and will continue to compete effectively
around the world unless artificial trade barriers raise our costs and
put us at a world market disadvantage.
My own company is
typical. Our products include pizza ovens, commercial toasters, hot dog
grills and steamers. We have been in business for 45 years, employ 225
people, and have been growing steadily. We opened a new plant last year,
increasing our manufacturing capacity by 200%.
A significant percentage
of our customers are in the fast food industry and we have been able to
follow these customers overseas. We have distribution in 104 foreign countries
and over 30 percent of our product is exported.
However, we do have
a problem, a big problem. And that is the cost of stainless steel, especially
when prices here are higher than those our competitors pay overseas.
If you have ever looked
behind the order counter at a McDonalds or a Burger King, or into the
kitchen at any restaurant or cafeteria, large or small, what you see is
an expanse of clean, shining metal. The great majority of the products
of our industry are made from stainless steel. Hygiene requires a non-rusting,
hygienic surface that is easily cleaned. Economy and efficiency demand
durability. Stainless steel represents about 30 percent of all costs of
production.
Let me give you two
examples of how protectionism in the steel industry hurts not only our
industry but also our nation's economy.
First, under the voluntary
restraint agreements of the late 1980s, stainless steel prices rose 75
percent in one eighteen month period. This was well above world prices.
Our ability to compete overseas was crippled. Growth came to a staggering
halt. It was several years after the VRAs were removed before our industry
was able to regain our momentum.
Then, last year, the
domestic stainless steel industry cam before the ITC claiming unfair competition
and asking for punitive tariffs. There was clear evidence at that time
that the domestic stainless steel industry was profitable and that domestic
production and sales were greater in 1999 than in 1988. Information from
standard overseas pricing data, publicly available, showed that U.S. prices
for stainless steel were at that time ten percent higher than Germany
and ten percent higher than the average Asian prices. Therefore, our members
were already paying a premium for our stainless steel. I ask you, where
was the unfair competition? Where was the injury?
But, as you know,
the current law under which the ITC must make its decision completely
disregards the impact of its decision on U.S. industries that use a material
like steel, and in fact disregards the impact of its decision on the U.S.
economy as a whole. The ITC decision was based on only one thing; without
imports, the U.S. stainless steel industry would have been even more profitable.
That is all that mattered.
And how did the Department
of Commerce determine the size of punitive duties, given evidence that
U.S. prices were already higher than overseas prices? I have no explanation
for that at all. All I know is that the duties totally shut down shipments
of stainless steel from many of the overseas manufacturers.
What is the consequence?
In the ten months since the ITC and Commerce decisions, the U.S. prices
of stainless steel has risen thirty percent. Some of this is due to increases
in the cost of nickel, but that explains only part of it. The rest is
pure protectionism.
We cannot continue
to grow, and we cannot even maintain our overseas markets if we pay more
for a raw material than our overseas competitors. In fact, our export
sales are slowing. Up until now, many of our members have been protected
by long-term contracts, both for steel purchases and for our export sales.
The impact starting right about now will be severe.
Some of those 12,000
jobs in our industry directly tied to export sales are at risk. If steel
prices go up any further, we will be at risk of losing these export markets
for good. It is very hard to regain a customer once he is lost, particularly
an international customer.
The only solution
is reform of U.S. trade laws to require the ITC to consider the impact
of its decisions on using industries and the national economy, and even
if ITC does find unfair trade, to require Commerce to assess duties no
higher than required to create an even playing field.
Thank you.
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