Steel tariffs are needed to be lowered from Auto Parts Industry
Some of the automotive suppliers from U.S. have demanded for
exclusions from the high tariffs which were mostly agreed by the
Bush administration and almost all companies filed range from
Tier ! producers to the small Tier 3 Producers. Motor& Equipment
Manufacturers Association (also named MEMA), taking into account
the possibilities of serious job losses has required for an
expand of existent guidelines of the second stage of exclusions
and 'to consider the critical factors of price and supply steel
as part of its decisions''s.
Despite the fact that MEMA is prone to support an existent of
domestic steel industry, its tariffs had a strong negative
effect on the automotive suppliers, according to Chris Bates the
president of MEMA. This supply constraints and the increases in
price which are generally a result of the high steel tariffs are
now obliging large Tier 1 Automotive suppliers to start creating
or buying components that they have previously created and
purchased from foreign sources.
According to what MEMA claims, a tendency of responding to the
increase of steel tariffs is to reduce the production and to
start thinking about the movement of some manufacturing
facilities permanently abroad. MEMA also claim that the shift of
movement facilities and jobs to other countries where prices
remain the same is growing fast.
The industry of auto parts suppliers haven't benefited from the
first round of the process of exclusion, taken care of by the
Department of Commerce and the U.S. trade Representatives's
office.Taking into account the fact that the U.S. manufacturers
of automotive parts and components reach a price of 95 percent
of the steel from U.S.A they have not felt relief from the
existed guidelines of the administration's exclusion process.
The process has described mainly speciality forms of steel from
abroad which could not been created or bought from the U.S.
market. The U.S. steel producers have reached exclusion in the
first tour for importing slabs and flat-rolled steel products at
low prices, while steel costumers have gained minimal relief.
Moreover, competitors from abroad have gained a more powerful
control over the U.S. market by buying steel at normal prices
and by exporting finished or partially finished products at
lower tariffs.
MEMA claims is heavily concerned by the fact that high steel
prices will threaten the viability of a powerful American
manufacturing center' without a secure supply of raw materials
and a steady cost structure, U.S. auto parts and components
manufacturers will not be able to secure future business and to
ensure their competitive stance in the global automotive
industry', MEMA claimed.
MEMA will continue as strong supporter of the House Resolution,
introduced by representative Joe Knollenberg on Oct. 9. The
legislation which happens to be bipartisan has gained support in
the 107th Congress and it has been introduced again in the
House in 3003. This Resolution of Knollenberg's asks the
president to ask that the International Trade Comission should
reconsider the effect of the tariffs on steel consumption
industries in U.S. The present analysis must be included in the
ITC's midterm review of the administrations's steel program,
which should be released by September 2003, said MEMA.