Just last spring, the steel import crisis
was the talk of Washington. The House of Representatives had
voted overwhelmingly to impose quotas on steel imports and the
Senate was preparing to vote on the same legislation. For its
part, the Clinton administration announced a "Steel Action Plan,"
which promised a variety of measures to stem the crisis as an
alternative to legislation. An agency with responsibility for
implementing U.S. trade laws, the U.S. International Trade Commission
was moving toward a unanimous decision to impose duties on imported
steel. There was a definite atmosphere of urgency throughout
Washington in responding to the crisis.
Now, steel imports are down and U.S. steel companies are showing
some signs of recovery. The atmosphere of urgency seems to have
passed. Unfortunately, the underlying economic problems that
sparked the steel crisis are still very much in evidence.
Perhaps the most dramatic evidence that the steel crisis has
passed in the minds of Washington policy-makers is found in
the recent actions of the Clinton administration and the International
Trade Commission. After urging steel wire rod producers to seek
relief under a U.S. trade statute known as Section 201, the
Clinton administration took five months longer than allowed
under the law to reach a decision on the case and then granted
only limited relief.
For its part, the ITC also seems to have had a rather dramatic
change of heart.
After voting unanimously to support antidumping cases on hot
rolled steel in 1999, the commission this year turned down a
similar set of cases that were being considered on cold-rolled
steel by a 5-1 vote. In making their decision, the ITC gave
surprising weight to issues such as the 1998 General Motors
strike as a cause for the steel industry's problems; the same
issue was largely dismissed in their decisions on earlier cases.
The ITC also seemed to largely ignore a law passed by Congress
to change the way it accounted for intra-company steel transfers
-- this seemingly small difference in practice appears to have
had a critical impact upon the decision.
Congress was first to raise alarm cries about the steel crisis,
but it also has accomplished little. The quota bill was probably
intended more to prod the administration than as serious legislation.
Unfortunately, even sound proposals to revise U.S. trade laws
in ways that are fully consistent with the World Trade Organization
and would address a future import crisis seem to have been forgotten.
It is difficult to avoid the distinct impression that official
Washington has forgotten about the steel crisis. In particular,
the recent ITC and administration decisions appear to be attempts
to balance earlier support for the U.S. steel industry in 1998
and much of 1999.
In fact, although steel imports have trended down, the underlying
problems that sparked the steel crisis are still very much in
evidence. In 1998, imports controlled 30 percent of the U.S.
steel market, up from an average of less than 20 percent in
the early and mid-1990s. In 1999, imports controlled about 26.5
percent of the U.S. market. The 1999 import levels are down,
but they are still well above levels in any year other than
1998. For comparison, total steel imports in 1999 were up about
50 percent from 1993. The dollar figures also understate the
actual impact of imports on the domestic industry since distressed
producers in Asia, Russia and elsewhere sold many of these imports
at fire sale prices.
The sharp rise is all the more surprising since there is almost
universal agreement that the U.S. steel industry is quite competitive
and efficient by global standards; U.S. steel is as efficient
as any in the world in production per man-hour.
The real cause of the steel crisis was not lagging U.S. competitiveness,
but economic crises in Asia and Russia and gross government
interventions in the market in many other countries. The collapse
of markets in Asia and Russia displaced much of the steel production
in those countries into the United States. Asia is showing signs
of bouncing back, but the recovery is likely to continue for
some time and during that period Asian countries will be looking
to exports, including steel exports, to finance their economic
recovery. For its part, Japan is still showings signs of slipping
back into recession and the prospects for Russian recovery are
mixed.
The long-term distortions in the industry are at least as serious
as the short-term economic prospects. Collusion among Japanese
steel companies still supports dumping in foreign markets. Steel
industries in countries from Europe to Latin America were built
with heavy government subsidies that threaten to depress world
prices for many years to come. Two of the new steel powers --
Russia and China -- sport large and increasingly export oriented
steel industries that were built and remain largely controlled
by the governments of those countries.
In short, there simply is no global free market in steel. Even
if the symptoms of the steel crisis have abated somewhat, the
underlying problems remain and will continue to impact the U.S.
steel industry for years to come.
The steel crisis is a dramatic demonstration of globalization's
downside. With the U.S. market largely open and most manufactured
goods easily tradable, disruptions in the world economy can
easily result in large job losses in the United States. This
time it was a steel crisis, but next time it could just as easily
be an automobile import crisis, a computer import crisis, or
even another steel crisis, depending upon the nature of the
next global economic shock.
There are steps that could be taken to prevent a future crisis
with new legislation and administrative action, but memories
are short in Washington. Unfortunately, those that wish to forget
the steel crisis too quickly are sowing the seeds of still worse
problems in the future.
Copyright 2000, Pittsburgh Post Gazette
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