AISI submits comments on foreign trade barriers to US Trade Policy Staff Committee

Friday, 28 October 2016 22:39:32 (GMT+3)   |   San Diego
       

The American Iron and Steel Institute (AISI) today submitted comments to the Trade Policy Staff Committee (TPSC) on USTR’s 2017 National Trade Estimate Report (NTE) on Foreign Trade Barriers. The 60-page document, signed by Kevin Dempsey, AISI’s senior vice president of public policy and general counsel, identifies significant trade barriers and other trade-distorting practices that limit the competitiveness of major US companies.
 
The AISI comments highlighted:
 
• Export Restrictions: “Many countries have enacted substantial barriers to raw material exports in order to ensure an abundant domestic supply, at low prices, for their manufacturers. These export barriers include export quotas, export taxes, and export licensing requirements. Foreign governments use such restrictions to discourage exports of raw materials, promote the development of their domestic industries, and subsidize their domestic downstream industries. Many of the restrictions are inconsistent with World Trade Organization (WTO) agreements.”

• Import Barriers: “Import-restricting policies in foreign countries, such as tariffs and other import charges, quantitative restrictions, import licensing, and customs barriers, can distort trade by protecting a country’s domestic producers from import competition, to the detriment of foreign producers. Import tariffs accomplish this by giving a price advantage to locally produced goods over similar imported goods. Restrictive and opaque or unpredictable import licensing systems can also be used as an obstacle to trade.”

• Investment Barriers: “Restrictions on foreign investment and ownership often unfairly distort global trade and prevent US businesses from taking advantage of potentially lucrative investment opportunities. While the United States maintains a relatively open environment for foreign investors, many other countries continue to impose restrictions on foreign investment within their borders, to the disadvantage of US companies.”

• Subsidies: “Many foreign governments – including in particular China – provide their domestic steel industries with various forms of subsidies, including prohibited export subsidies, giving those industries an unfair advantage in international competition and creating a significant trade barrier for US companies operating globally. Indeed, many subsidies have the consequence of protecting domestic products from foreign competition or artificially stimulating exports of a particular domestic product, thereby displacing US exports in global markets. In addition, heavily subsidized producers introduce market-distorting behavior and other trade and investment imbalances to the global economy.”

• State Owned Enterprises and Government Intervention: “Foreign governments are increasingly using state owned enterprises (SOEs) and other methods of government intervention to unfairly tilt the playing field, both within a country’s borders and in global markets. China, in particular, has created massive state-owned and -controlled national champions that are designed to be competitive on the international stage, and other countries are following suit. The rise in SOEs represents a growing threat to fair trade and the ability of private steel producers to compete globally. SOE investment at home and abroad forces companies to compete directly against foreign governments in markets around the world, creating significant imbalances that harm workers and private companies competing in those markets. These distortions impact US and global steel markets and related upstream and downstream markets, as well as other global industries.”

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