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Trump’s steel and aluminium tariffs cost US consumers $900,000 a year for every job saved, experts say

Evidence shows cost of tariffs paid by Americans rather than other countries

Heather Long
Wednesday 08 May 2019 07:22 EDT
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Liam Fox calls Donald Trump's tariffs on steel and aluminium 'absurd'

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Donald Trump has shown little interest in removing the steel and aluminium tariffs he imposed more than a year ago despite growing evidence Americans are paying a hefty price for these tariffs and increasing pressure from Republicans in Congress to remove them.

US consumers and businesses are paying more than $900,000 (£690,750) a year for every job saved or created by Mr Trump steel tariffs, according to calculations by experts at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.

The cost is more than 13 times the typical salary of a steelworker, according to Labour Department data, and it is similar to other economists' estimates that Mr Trump's tariffs on washing machines are costing consumers $815,000 per job created.

"It's very high. It's arresting," said Gary Hufbauer, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute who did the steel tariff cost calculation. "The reason it's so high is that steel is a very capital intensive industry. There are not many workers."

Mr Trump has said repeatedly that the metals tariffs are necessary for national security, for good-paying jobs and for leverage in trade negotiations.

There was hope among Republicans and business leaders that Mr Trump would remove the tariffs - at least on Canada and Mexico - once the US-Mexico-Canada trade agreement negotiations were done. But the tariffs remain, a warning sign for Chinese leaders who want Mr Trump to remove his tariffs on their country's products as part of the deal the two sides are currently negotiating.

Supporters of Mr Trump's tariffs, such as the Alliance for American Manufacturing, counter that more than 12,700 good-paying jobs have been created or saved at steel and aluminium factories since the president put this policy in place in March 2018.

They also point to substantial amounts of investment in US metal mills that should benefit the nation for years to come, including $1bn that was just announced at a US Steel plant outside Pittsburgh.

"Congrats to @U_S_Steel for investing $1+ BILLION in America's most INNOVATIVE steel mill. 232 Tariffs make Pennsylvania and USA more prosperous/secure by bringing Steel and Aluminum industries BACK. Tariffs are working. Pittsburgh is again The Steel City. USA economy is BOOMING!" Mr Trump tweeted last week.

Many economists and business leaders point out that jobs in steel-using industries outnumber those in steel production by about 80 to 1, according to experts at Harvard University and the University of California, Davis.

Mr Trump has claimed other countries are paying the tariff bill, but evidence shows the tariffs are taxes paid by Americans.

US companies that buy metals are either absorbing higher costs or passing them along to consumers. General Motors and Ford said Mr Trump's tariffs have cost them a billion dollars each.

"The consumer pays for this in the end. They just don't always recognise it," said James Knott Jr, chief executive of Riverdale Mills Corporation in Northbridge, Massachusetts, which makes wire mesh products for everything from fences to commercial fishing nets. "These 232 tariffs protect my foreign competition rather than protecting me."

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Raw steel prices surged after Mr Trump put 25 per cent tariffs on imported steel on some countries in March and then expanded the tariffs to most countries in June, including Canada, Mexico and the European Union.

The result is that domestic steel prices have been higher than foreign ones, boosting profits for US steel mills but putting US manufacturers that use steel like Riverdale at a disadvantage to European and Chinese competitors.

Riverdale is absorbing the tariff costs for now, but Mr Knott Jr said it forced him to cut costs elsewhere. He ended up reducing his 200-person workforce by 50 people. He did it via attrition - simply not filling vacancies after people left - but it is hampering him at a time when he says business should be thriving in a strong economy.

Republicans in Congress are growing increasingly vocal in their insistence that Mr Trump remove the steel and aluminium tariffs, at least on Canada and Mexico, which are major feeders of metals to the United States. Some GOP senators are threatening not to approve Mr Trump's USMCA agreement until the tariffs on US neighbours are removed.

"If these tariffs aren't lifted, USMCA is dead. There is no appetite in Congress to debate USMCA with these tariffs in place," wrote senator Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, last week in a Wall Street Journal opinion piece.

Tom Gibson, president of the American Iron and Steel Institute, said Mr Trump's tariffs are about righting years of foreign nations like China undercutting US steel production. He points out that US steel mills are now running at more than 80 per cent capacity, a level not seen in over a decade and that imports have fallen from 29 per cent a year ago to 20 per cent now.

"The steel tariffs implemented by the president last year have enabled steelmakers to begin to recover from the historic import surges that devastated the industry a few years ago," Mr Gibson said. "The tariffs are working, but now is not the time to lift them."

But evidence is growing that the metals tariffs are starting to bite. Last year, US manufacturing companies went on a hiring spree, adding the most new employees in more than two decades as the good economy caused demand to rise. But since the start of the year, manufacturing job growth has cooled.

From February to April, US manufacturers added 12,000 net new manufacturing jobs, the weakest gains in the sector since before Mr Trump took office.

Mr Hufbauer and Euijin Jung of the Peterson Institute calculated that every steel job saved is costing US consumers over $900,000 because US companies have been paying about 10 per cent more for steel since Mr Trump's tariffs went into effect. The total additional cost to the economy is about $11.5bn a year.

There is debate among economists about how many jobs have truly been created or saved because of Mr Trump's tariffs, but Mr Hufbauer and Mr Jung decided to take the Alliance for American Manufacturing's figure for 12,700, which works out to over $900,000 a job.

AAM said about 9,300 of those jobs are steel alone, which means the cost could be more than $1.2m per steel job.

Supporters of tariffs counter that the US Treasury is receiving some revenue from the tariffs and that the longer the tariffs remain in place the more the domestic industry will thrive.

The Washington Post

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