Representing the other side of this conversation:
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"What is dumping? Our rival and enemy wants us to have essential raw materials below their cost. Really? They subsidize our military, infrastructure, elevators, automobiles, motorcycles and beer cans? This hurts us how?
The point where it hurts us is when they stop dumping and start charging higher than market prices due to an acquired monopoly status. That is hard to imagine right now in a market of over-supply. "Dumping" hurts us when it stops and the price goes up. And we want that day to come sooner. We want higher prices now!
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Remember when the Chinese bullied the Japanese in the South China Sea and threatened to use its Rare Earth Element near monopoly to sink Japanese electronics? (REE's relevant to missile guidance systems too , , ,)
Separately, industries like steel have substantial barriers to entry and re-entry. Skilled labor once gone is , , , gone.
Chinese companies are not just subject to market forces; they are also agents of the Chinese government.
Some things to think about.
I agree, those points are the test here - and I don't find them persuasive.
Is steel analogous to rare earth elements? Are the Chinese on a path to monopolize or capable of that? Could they withhold from us in a way that would hurt our national security? Could we rebuild our industry fast enough if we faced an embargo? Could the Chinese pull off an embargo? I don't see it.
Steel is perhaps the opposite of rare earth elements. Iron ore is all over northern MN for example and we have the Great Lakes for shipping. The largest Molybdenum mine in the world, a steel strengthener, is in Leadville Colorado.
"industries like steel have substantial barriers to entry and re-entry"
This is an important consideration Like an oil refinery or a nuclear plant, these large facilities don't just pop up or shut down with a snap of the fingers, but I am reminded of how our economy turned itself inside out to supply a world war effort last time and we have a better capability to do that 80 years later if need be. Outdated steel mills was our economic problem in the first place. New ones I assume use new technology.
70% of US steel comes from the US already. It is not a unique product nor a cornered market. I'm guessing that figure is misleading because of recycled steel, not the highest quality for certain applications, but neither is steel in many cases. Plenty of other materials are lighter, stronger, more resilient for certain high end applications. Economics IS part of steel's strength. If it was all about weight and strength issues, steel loses for many, many uses. That we don't have a country without steel (Trump yesterday)is political drivel. We have a country and we have steel, domestic and foreign, and many other materials.
Why is global demand slowing if steel is so strategic?
"a long-term decline in steel intensity due to technological and environmental factors will continue to weigh on steel demand in the future"
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-steel-demand-global/global-steel-demand-growth-to-slow-in-2018-worldsteel-says-idUSKBN1CL0Q8When copper prices went up we started making plumbing pipes out of PEX (plastic) and sending information over glass (fiber optics), gained many advantages, never to fully go back.
Trump made the national security argument yesterday as convincing as he could and it fell flat IMHO, then he went on to make other economic arguments that are nothing other than political. Why do we need the other arguments if the national security argument is fully valid?
Here is the economic argument: The tariffs would add 33,000 steel and aluminum jobs, while costing 179,000 jobs in other industries and raising costs for everyone.
Could China corner the market and cut off our supply? No. Here are some other places where production could be increased, besides building it ourselves (all over the world):
https://www.worldsteel.org/en/dam/jcr:4af7fffe-1529-4954-86df-7398b050a076/World-Steel-in-Figures-2017-Infographic_web1.jpgThe world makes steel in 44 countries: China, [European Union], Japan, India, United States, Russia, South Korea, Germany, Turkey, Brazil, Italy, Taiwan, Ukraine, Iran, Mexico, France, Spain, Canada, Poland, Vietnam, Austria, Belgium, United Kingdom, Egypt, Netherlands, South Africa, Australia, Slovakia, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, Sweden, Argentina, Czech Republic, Thailand, Kazakhstan, Finland, Romania, United Arab Emirates, Malaysia, Qatar, Luxembourg.
Yes, Luxembourg makes steel! What kind of a world war wouldn't have a good number of these places on OUR side, and how much of the next war, think cyber-war, electronic war, neutron bomb, will be fought with steel?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_steel_productionWe are 4th in the world because it is NOT particularly high tech or strategic IMO.
We could buy up Chinese excess steel now while they are 'dumping' if it is strategic and buy us time to open new plants during the (imagined) embargo.
In what situation would China embargo steel against the US and how successful would it be? China is over-invested in steel and the world has an over-supply problem. Shutting off their supplies means shutting down their cash register. Wouldn't we be able to break an embargo like every other country does. China sells to Europe and we buy from Europe? Or does China shut down all production and all exports and fights war without money or an economy? What is the regime of China without exports, without an economy, without money? Not a powerhouse or a worthy foe. Have any of the trade protectionists thought this through??
Important quote from G M: " China cannot afford a major economic downturn. It could present a real threat to internal stability."
China cannot cut off steel to the world in crisis without setting off a full blown trade war and that would cause them unsurvivable downturn and internal chaos. They could do that out of unilateral madness but not as a thoughtful, strategic move.
"Chinese companies are not just subject to market forces; they are also agents of the Chinese government."
True but then the Chinese government is subject to market forces at some point. They cannot devalue their way to prosperity. They cannot sell anything big below cost in the long run. They cannot keep making bad loans or prop up large failed industries long term. Most of all, they cannot strategically match over-capacity with limiting sales. Their alleged dumping is a sign of weakness, not strength. They have a day of economic reckoning coming and a number of us here have been watching for signs of that.
Our relationship with China is one of co-dependency as much as it is enemies or rivals. We could balance our budget and stop borrowing from them if we wanted to. We could make our own steel if we wanted to. We could make box store products here and buy cheap stuff from a hundred countries instead. But take away the US and maybe European markets from China and what is left of their economy? Shambles. The day they start a full blown economic war with the US will be the beginning of the end for China.
A few more points:
1) The US constitution gives Congress the power of taxation. A tariff is a tax! The national security emergency argument is the only approach Trump can try without Congress so he tried it. The US constitution also gives Congress the only authority to declare war so national security isn't strictly in the Article Two domain either. The steel market has been evolving since the 1970s, what is the national emergency today that justifies going around Congress? There isn't one. This exact proposal could have been put through Congress over the past 12 months and it wasn't for one reason - because like with Obama's executive orders, it wouldn't have passed. Ends justify means. Like gun control, we must do something! Or at least tell key constituents that we did.
2) Equal treatment under the law. [Who gives a rip about that anymore?!] Tariffs targeting specific products and industries fail this test, require the central planning of government to cozy up with the selected protected, see Trump's smiling photos with the steel industry. But the allegation is that the Chinese government meddles in ALL its strategic industries and manipulates its currency relating to ALL its exports. Answering that with an arbitrary, crony government response of our own is wrong and fails this important constitutional test miserably, IMHO
3) No mention in all the China allegations, manipulating their currency, subsidizing industries, that we manipulated our currency to the tune of $4.5 trillion over the Obama years and subsidized everything from auto makers to solar. Oh that.
We can compete with the Chinese by being MORE free, not less, and this if really needed should go through Congress and should apply to all our people and all our industries equally.