-Caveat Lector-

http://www.washtimes.com/commentary/commentary-2000112218540.htm

Tilting the field on world trade
Aaron Schavey
WASHINGTON TIMES
November 22, 2000

Thanks to Sen. Robert Byrd, the United States is inviting a trade war with
Canada, Japan and other major U.S. trading
partners  and putting U.S. jobs at risk.

The West Virginia Democrat would no doubt bristle at the suggestion. After all,
he merely added an amendment to an
agriculture-spending bill recently signed by President Clinton.  But the devil's
in the details, and Mr. Byrd's
amendment is already upsetting our foreign trading partners and casting a pall
over the future of free trade.

The amendment changes U.S. anti-dumping laws, which use tariffs to protect U.S.
industries from foreign competition that dump massive amounts of their products
into the U.S. market, depress prices and push American industries out of
business. Specifically, it would transfer the money raised through these tariffs
from the U.S. Treasury to the businesses that requested the protection.

Mr. Byrd says he sponsored the amendment because "U.S. trade law is not intended
to raise revenue for the general
treasury." That may be true. But how can he miss the pro-tariff incentive he's
dangling in front of American
industries? In practice, this legislation will simply encourage U.S. businesses
to seek relief from foreign competition
through higher tariffs. They already have an incentive to seek protection via
U.S. anti-dumping laws because a
favorable ruling makes imported goods and services less competitive. This
windfall in revenues  amounting to
approximately $200 million each year will increase the protectionist tendencies
of many U.S. businesses.

Mr. Byrd's action won't go unnoticed. When the United States indulges in
protectionism, foreign countries respond in
kind. The Rushford Report, a monthly business newsletter, notes that more than
130 U.S. companies have been
investigated by foreign countries in recent years for alleged anti-dumping
practices, and no doubt some of these
investigations were lodged in retaliation for U.S. anti-dumping investigations.

And who ends up paying the price? Consumers and workers. Applying tariffs on raw
materials like steel or wood
drives up the price of im-ported materials and makes exporters less competitive
on the world market. The less
competitive exporters are, the more they need to fire workers to stay afloat.

Mr. Byrd's amendment also shows favoritism for the steel industry, a key
business in his home state. Since the 1998
Asian financial crisis, which saw steel imports to the United States increase,
the steel industry (which employs about
200,000 Americans) has aggressively petitioned for relief under anti-dumping laws.

But what about the 8 million Americans who work in steel-using industries, from
transportation to construction?
According to trade expert Brink Lindsey, they outnumber steel-makers 40 to 1.
Does this mean that for every one
American who benefits from the law, 40 others must suffer? And let's not forget
how U.S. consumers  who benefit
from the lower prices that free trade brings to such products as automobiles,
houses and major household appliances
would be affected.

Federal lawmakers may be ignorant of the bill's ramifications, but our trading
partners are not. (Indeed, it was largely
the failure of U.S. policy-makers to address anti-dumping laws that caused the
Seattle trade talks to collapse last year.)
The 11 countries that make up the European Union, along with Japan and Canada,
asked President Clinton to veto this
bill, and they have been threatening to take action against the United States
because of it.

The United States and the EU are already locked in a number of trade disputes
over such issues as genetically modified
livestock and export subsidies to U.S. firms. The Byrd amendment can only
further harm trade relations with many of
the largest U.S. trading partners.

Worse, it shows the United States is willing to sacrifice the interests of
consumers and exporters  and risk a trade war
to keep a few protected industries insulated from the rigors of competition. The
price is too steep.
________________________________________________________________________

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