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| FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
Contact: |
Christina Bucher |
| August 22, 2002 |
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The PBN Company |
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Tel. 202-466-6210 |
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CITAC: MANY SMALL BUSINESSES OVERLOOKED IN STEEL EXCLUSION PROCESS
Final list of 178 exclusions to steel tariffs
published today
Washington, DC - The Consuming Industries Trade Action Coalitionis
(CITAC) Steel Task Force reacted negatively today to the final list
of steel products excluded from the 201 steel tariffs by the Office
of the U.S. Trade Representative.
Lewis Leibowitz, Counsel to CITAC said overall, ithe results bear
out that if you own a small steel-consuming company, it is very
hard to win an exclusion.i
According to Leibowitz, specialty products made abroad and unavailable
in the U.S. generally received exclusions. However, a number of
steel products that are in short supply in this country did not.
"Shortages and delays are more likely to fall on smaller companies
than larger ones. In the last several months, CITAC has seen that
steel-using small businesses are not able to deal with the shortages,
delays, and price hikes they are experiencing,i stated Leibowitz.
iYet, based on unsubstantiated objections by domestic producers,
many of these exclusion requests were turned down. How can domestic
steel producers be hurt by imports that pick up the shortfall that
domestic producers cannot deliver?" he said.
In November, USTR is expected to announce the next phase of the
exclusion process. Submissions will be accepted in the fall and
decisions made by March 2003.
"By November, some small companies may well not be around
to ask for exclusions. The government is not blunting the impact
of the tariff on consumers and the process should in no way be seen
as more than a little band-aid on a huge economic gash created by
this tax on steel consumers. Product exclusions are not a substitute
for rational trade policy that takes both producers and consumers
into consideration," concluded Leibowitz.
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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