Steel tariffs on the grounds of national security? The argument simply does not stand basic scrutiny.
There can be valid concerns as set
out in Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962 (19
U.S.C. §1862) which give broad and open authority to the executive branch
to invoke national security interests as grounds for trade restrictions or
tariffs. Likewise Article
XXI of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) provides formal
rules for any nation to do likewise if deemed legitimate for national security
interests.
Yes, steel is a critical component
in the machinery and weapons of national defense, but these tariffs are not
about national security, and oddly the enacted sanctions target our allies and
friends disproportionately verses China or other potential adversaries. Objectively considered, the timing and target
industry were much more likely of a domestic political nature, i.e. geared towards
an electorate of workers and families within the steel and coal industries (coal is still supplies near 1/5th
of the energy used in steel production and is used in carbonizing steel). Considering
that these tariffs were announced during the run up to a high visibility US congressional
special election in the steel and coal producing state of Pennsylvania and
given that this off year election was poised to be an embarrassment to the president
and the GOP – (and ultimately was with
the race going to the Dem by a slim 0.2 percent margin in a district that Mr.
Trump carried by nearly twenty percentage points) - it is more likely this move was pure domestic
politics than an issue of true national security.
Why do steel
imports not pose a national security risk? Because the steel that the US military and
defense establishment use constitute only a very small fraction of total
domestic steel consumption and there is more than ample domestic capacity to
meet Department of Defense (DoD) requirements. Following the September 11th
attacks on the US, the Commerce Department evaluated whether iron ore and
semi-finished steel imports were a threat to national security. For its part in
providing information for the commerce departments study, the DoD
estimated that it needed about 325,000 net
tons of finished steel products per year—less than 0.3 percent of the
domestic industry’s annual output. With the post 911 increases in US
military size and procurements during protracted operations in the Middle East
and stepped up operations worldwide, that number has increased, but only about 3 percent of steel
shipped domestically in 2016 was used for national defense and
homeland security.
Our options, in the event that the
U.S. enters into a major international conflict requiring a larger share of
domestic steel or secure supplies of non-US steel to supply our defense and
security requirements are: (1) increase domestic steel production, and /or reallocate
a greater percentage of the domestic steel for the Pentagon. The most recent
domestic steel production numbers from late March of this year estimate utilized
domestic US steel manufacturing capacity at 77.4% (http://www.steel.org/about-aisi/statistics.aspx
), showing more than ample room to increase production to meet US defense needs
even if those needs rose multi-fold. (2) Increase imports from allied countries
to meet our military steel needs. (1) There exists no reasonable expectation that
Canada (America’s largest supplier of imported steel and a NATO ally) or Europe
intend to thwart our supply requirements. Considering that out greatest geopolitical
rival China ranks 10th on the list of leading sources of imported steel and is
only 3 percent of US imported steel and Russia is our 11th ranked source at 2.3
percent of US steel, the idea of US national security prerogatives becomes even
more shaky.
The counter argument is that while
US imports of Chinese and Russian steel are small, China accounts for nearly half
of world’s crude steel production. This is a legitimate concern but must be
considered in context of China also representing 45% of the world’s steel use
in finished products, and therefore the vast majority of their steel production
is consumed in domestic Chinese manufacturing.
None of the top 9 suppliers of US
steel imports are adversaries to the US and several are close allies such as
South Korea, Japan, and our NATO ally and number one supplier Canada.
In addition to the US maintaining close trading and security alliances
with its largest imported steel suppliers, the United States has defense
procurement memorandum of understanding with the majority of our top suppliers.
(2)
If you are looking for a real
national security risks to the US within resource production and supply, I
suggest rare earth elements. It is difficult to argue that Chinese or Russian
steel - or aluminum production for that matter (China and an all combined
east and central Europe produced approx. 12.5% each of world aluminum as of February
2018 ) - is a more pressing issue than China’s near monopoly in rare earth
minerals (approximately
90% of the world production). Rare earth elements are not only critical
for our high-tech economy and consumer electronics, but also will be in increasing
demand as critical elements in our efforts to curb CO2 emissions to address the real threat of global climate change. Where production and control of the rare earth
elements market becomes a more immediate concern relative to national security,
aside from the near monopoly our closest near peer rival has achieved, is the
direct criticality to defense. These elementd are vital in lasers, radar,
sonar, night vision gear, missile guidance, smart bombs, jet engines and alloys
on armored vehicles. Addressing this REAL
national security supply chain issue requires the extractable deposits in the
US, Canada, Europe and within other western aligned and US friendly nations be
developed. The United States, and to a greater extent Canada and Iceland, have known
rare earth element reserves at advanced stages of development. However, extraction
by the same techniques employed in China - which produce acid drainage from open pits
mines, heavy metals and radionucleotides laden air borne dust from milling,
contaminated waste water and hazardous
solid waste from concentration operations and chemical waste from final separation
processes (3)
- is not environmentally responsible or acceptable. New processes or methods of
mitigating the environmental impact must be developed and implemented, and the research
and development dollars to spur innovation and new extraction technologies must
be funded as a real US national security priority.
http://foreignpolicy.com/2016/07/12/decoder-rare-earth-market-tech-defense-clean-energy-china-trade/
Likewise, the US should be
concerned with evolving control in cobalt and lithium production and markets.
The US comes in somewhere around a distant eight in global lithium production,
and China or Chinese based corporations seem intent on locking down a sizable
share of global lithium and cobalt resources, both elements with growing demand
for battery production. If lithium-based batteries continue to be most
promising for a growing electric car market, home power storage and to power an
insatiable market for mobile electronic devices, lithium may be the new
oil. Move over OPEC, hello OLEC –
Organization for Lithium Exporting Countries, a far greater emerging threat to
US security than steel is or will ever become.
It is often uncompetitive
industries that argue the loudest for protections based on national security
consideration. Certainly, manufacturing of nuclear weapons or printing domestic
currency or advanced new technology with duel use implications should not be
outsourced. However, the national security argument can be applied to few low-end
goods, services, or technologies. Even when there is some basis for a national
security argument, if the nation does not have an absolute or comparative
advantage in production, it is to the nation’s overall advantage to engage in
trade to procure much of these good or services.
Rather than lash out with unwarranted
tariffs that risk destroying the international order under the guise of
national security imperatives, how about we leverage the institutions of the
global order we constructed (via GATT, WTO G20, etc.) to hold accountable actual
trade practices counter to the laws and norms of a free and open market when
they do exist. Where our disadvantage is
shown through objective investigation to originate from within rather than
secondary to unfair practices, we must remedy the situation through coherent
governing, forward looking industrial and education policy, and through new market formation
within those areas where we have a true competitive advantage or can create a comparative advantage within the framework and norms of the liberal international order of
free and open markets.
2 comments:
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