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Steel wars and the WTO

With the European Union threatening to take the United States to the WTO disputes 
system over the
latter's imposing tariffs on steel imports, Tony Blair finds himself in a dilemma.

MICHAEL HINDLEY


WHEN George Bush senior sent his trade representative Carla Hills off as the United 
States'
Ambassador to the Uruguay Round that led to the setting up of the World Trade 
Organisation (WTO), he
presented her with a crowbar, symbolic of the U.S. determination to prise open foreign 
markets in
the interest of "free trade". It was therefore a mixture of exasperation and 
embarrassment that
greeted President George W. Bush's recent announcement of the imposition of punitive 
tariffs on
steel imports into the U.S. The exasperation came from adherents of the free trade 
mantra, most
vocally the European Union's (E.U.) Trade Commissioner, Pascal Lamy.

The November WTO summit in Doha had seen the E.U. join the U.S. in pressuring 
developing countries
once again to open their markets, particularly in the services sector where the West 
is strong. For
the E.U., this steel dispute is doubly annoying, for it had enforced its own 
"restructuring" of its
domestic steel industry after bitter battles with trade unions in the industry in the 
early 1980s.
The mass production of less specialised varieties of steel is something that the E.U. 
has let go and
developing countries, and more latterly the former state-controlled economies of 
Eastern Europe,
have filled the gap.

Bush at least intends to pay off his domestic political debts. It has not gone 
unnoticed that some
of the unproductive U.S. steel mills are in the State of West Virginia, whose four 
votes in the
presidential electoral college were so vital to Bush in the election that he so 
narrowly (if at all)
won. The coming congressional elections will be vital for the knife-edge situation in 
both Houses
and Bush is shrewd enough to know that the patriotic wave after September 11 is not a 
guarantee of
success in areas of continuing industrial decline.

The embarrassment of Bush's "America first" policy could not be greater than with his 
most fervent
foreign supporter, British Prime Minister Tony Blair. Bush's ruthless pursuit of a 
unilateral policy
in Afghanistan has severely dented the notion propounded by Blair in the immediate 
aftermath of
September 11 that standing shoulder to shoulder with the U.S. was the best way of 
ensuring some
influence. The unilateral abandonment by Bush of free trade to embrace protectionism 
for U.S.
domestic electioneering could not have come in a more embarrassing sector than steel. 
First of all,
Blair has signally failed to show sympathy for calls to aid the British steel 
industry. On the
contrary, he has revelled in continuing Margaret Thatcher's policy of abandoning 
industrial "lame
ducks". Further, Blair has been caught up in yet another scandal about his links with 
big business.

An Indian businessman, Lakshmi Mittal, has made significant contributions to the 
Labour Party. Then
it transpired that Blair had written a letter of support for Mittal's steel ventures 
in Romania,
financed by an offshore company, on the somewhat tenuous grounds that Mittal's 
operations were
"British". Credulity was stretched when Blair's office denied that there was any link 
between the
two matters. Moreover, it then emerged that Mittal had been campaigning in the U.S. in 
favour of a
U.S. tariff on steel to protect his own interests there.

The latest opinion polls show that New Labour is considered sleazier than the previous 
Tory regime
whose image as "damaged goods" led to its defeat in 1997. The dubious practices of 
Labour's funding
raise serious questions about the probity of the party management itself. The more New 
Labour
jettisons its old political allies and funders, the trade unions, the more it has to 
have recourse
to other, less accountable and more obscure, sources.

The ever opportunistic Liberal Democrat leader, Charles Kennedy, has called for 
stronger links
between his party and the unions and the Trades Union Congress (TUC) was split at its 
general
council by a call to hold talks with the Tory party. It seems everyone wants to talk 
to the unions
other than the leader of the party they founded - Labour's Tony Blair.

Britain will be somewhat embarrassed when (or if) the E.U. does press ahead with its 
threat to take
the U.S. to the WTO disputes system and by any subsequent retaliatory measure taken by 
the E.U. in
compensation for losses suffered by European steel. The problem is not only a cut in 
direct E.U.
steel sales to the U.S. but the indirect losses that will accrue if and when steel 
from other parts
of the world, normally shipped to the U.S., is diverted to the unprotected markets of 
Europe.

Bush, however, knows that he is in fact in a strong position. The rest of the WTO, 
particularly the
E.U., is terrified that if the U.S. finds the WTO a nuisance for the reason of its 
continued actions
against it, it will simply leave. In fact the U.S. does have such legislation on its 
books, a kind
of "three strikes and you're out" provision, which says that the U.S. will review its 
membership if
the decision goes against it. This would bring about the collapse of the WTO, as 
surely as the U.S.
left the League of Nations doomed to failure in advance by not joining it. So it is 
not absolutely
sure that all the huffing and puffing by Monsieur Lamy will in fact lead to decisive 
action by the
E.U.

Moreover, even if the E.U. goes ahead with its threats, by the time the WTO procedures 
have cranked
into motion, the U.S. elections will be over and Bush can relax the sanctions. More 
gloomily, also
by then the world could be distracted by an even greater and more dangerous episode of 
American
unilateralism - namely an attack on Iraq.

Michael Hindley was a Labour Party member of the European Parliament from 1984 to 1999.



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