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Home / MSCI: Tariffs Must Focus on Bad Actors

MSCI: Tariffs Must Focus on Bad Actors

The Metals Service Center Institute also encourages the U.S. to address potential downstream circumvention in the entire industrial metals supply chain.

Posted: March 16, 2018

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M. Robert Weidner, III, the president and chief executive officer of the Metals Service Center Institute (MSCI; Rolling Meadows, IL), issued the following statement regarding the U.S. government’s plan to impose a 25 percent tariff on steel imports into the United States and a 10 percent tariff on aluminum imports:

“We appreciate the president’s focus on steel and aluminum and are encouraged that, for now, he will exempt Canadian and Mexican imports. The United States enjoys a substantial and beneficial metals trading relationship with Canada and Mexico. We’re pleased the president considered that relationship, and appreciate his pledge to discuss with our allies alternative ways to address U.S. concerns about the health of its steel and aluminum sectors. As the president said, there’s an avenue to modify or remove the tariffs under certain conditions. We’ll be watching those deliberations closely. The president also recommended a process by which certain articles can receive relief. We’ll be monitoring that process too.

“From the start of the administration’s Section 232 investigations, we have advocated that the administration focus penalties, targeting non-market countries like China that have routinely and flagrantly thwarted international and U.S. trade laws. The president should continue to direct his attention there, not on our North American allies.

“The administration also must continue to consider how these penalties will affect the entire industrial metals supply chain. Our mission is to foster healthy supply and healthy demand. As we stated in our testimony last year, there is growing evidence that China and others simply process raw steel and aluminum into parts in order to get around U.S. trade laws and flood the U.S. market with cheaper goods. The penalties imposed today will not help members for whom circumvention is a primary concern. We will continue to advocate for fair and free trade across the entire industrial metals supply chain.”

Last year, MSCI asked the administration to take strong action to help the entire U.S. steel and aluminum supply chains while exempting the United States’ North American trading partners from any proposed Section 232 penalties.

www.msci.org

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