Wednesday, 29 July 2009

On the face of it this may not seem world-shattering.  But it is a symptom of what is happening in Europe as the recession bites harder.  France has all along been the most protectionist of the leading powers and has a deeply ingrained ‘Fortress Europe’ in its makeup.    It shows in the way it is the leading advocate of more and more centralised bureaucratic controls on banks and alternative investments.

It has not learned the lessons of history that in the end the chief victims of protectgionism are those very countries practising itg.

See here the Chinese reaction!  It is to be more aggressive in its export drive targeting Africa and Middle Eastern countries.    This will hurt EU steel producers as the price of their exports is driven down.  

Apart from its moire fundamental failings (which I needn’t rehearse here!) the EU also suffers from having changed from a bloc of highly developed sophisticated economies into a mixed bag which now includes countries still building their economies after the catastrophe of Communism, some of whom might also be described as peasant economies.  They all have a vote and ignorant gut-prejudice surfaces from time to time.

The way of protectionism will impoverish the whole world.  

Christina

WALL STREET JOURNAL 29.7.09

EU Imposes Tariffs on Imports of Steel Pipe From China

By JOHN W. MILLER

BRUSSELS -- European Union trade officials approved pre-emptive penalties on imports of steel pipe from China, a precedent-setting move that suggests the trading bloc is growing more protectionist in the face of the economic downturn.

Tuesday's vote by trade officials from the EU's 27 member states is significant, say trade experts, because they accepted an argument from steel producers -- including the world's largest by volume, ArcelorMittal -- that punitive tariffs are needed to protect them from the threat of underpriced imports from China.

Previously, complainants have had to prove the imports had already hurt their businesses. Trade lawyers say they expect a host of industries to ask the EU for protective tariffs in August.

The case also concerns one of the steel sector's most important finished products. Seamless steel pipes are major parts in housing construction, gas and oil plants and the automotive industry. The vote was close, according to EU officials familiar with the matter, although they declined to reveal the final tally.

After clearing procedural hurdles, the duties, which will range from 17.7% to 39.2%, are expected to take effect in October and last five years, EU officials said. Temporary duties of up to 24.2% have been in place since April.

Chinese officials say they are preparing a case at the World Trade Organization against the EU and the U.S. over steel tariffs. On Monday, the Chinese Ministry of Commerce issued a statement saying it was "gravely concerned" about antidumping duties on Chinese imports in the U.S. and the EU.

"If they impose the tax, that means we will lose the EU market," says Tan Ling, a manager for Hengyang Valin Steel Tube Co., which exports to the EU. The EU currently accounts for 5% to 10% of the company's sales, says Ms. Tan, who has been to Brussels several times to plead her case with EU officials. The company will try to compensate by exporting more to the Middle East and Africa, she says.

European consumers of Chinese steel imports also are upset at the new tariffs. "Consumers have to pay more because the market is protected," says Jan van Meever, the owner and CEO of Jan van Meever BV, a Dutch company that buys steel pipes from China and resells them in Europe. "It's just the way it is these days."

Chinese exports have flooded the EU ever since China joined the WTO in 2001. Total shipments to the EU from China were $357 billion last year, up from $67 billion in 2000.

The EU's steel sector, a $250 billion-a-year business with 420,000 employees, has been vulnerable to imports because of Europe's high labor and environmental costs. Eurofer, the lobby group that represents European steelmakers, has lobbied hard for higher tariffs.

In the U.S. also, the steel industry has been on the front lines of demanding more protection from Chinese imports.

China came into Europe's seamless-pipe market only recently, its exports leaping to 552,368 tons last year from 35,000 tons in 2005. The surge came at the same time as EU imports of steel pipes from Russia and Ukraine were declining following the imposition of antidumping duties on imports from those countries in 2006.

But in those years the global economy was booming,The German export machine was firing on all cylinders, easily gobbling up the extra imports from China in 2007 and 2008. That made it difficult for European producers, when they filed their complaint in May 2008, to say they had been "injured" by dumped Chinese imports.

An import is considered to have been "dumped" when it is sold in a foreign market at or below cost to gain market share. Under WTO rules, the importing country may retaliate by applying "antidumping" duties. The country must demonstrate that goods have been dumped and that its companies have lost substantial sales as a direct consequence.

As the slowdown gathered steam last year, Europe's steel-pipe producers decided to try another tack. They argued that while they couldn't prove past losses, the threat of future injury, in an economic downturn, was so overwhelming that higher tariffs were essential.

"It is likely that low-priced imports will become even more attractive in a market which is increasingly seeking out cost reductions," the EU trade commission wrote in its final report.

Basing a claim on the threat of injury "is a perfectly legal strategy, but it has simply not, until now, been used as a matter of EU policy," says Nikolay Mizulin, a Brussels-based trade lawyer with Hogan & Hartson LLP. This case "is a sign of growing protectionism and could open the floodgates to many more industries who believe they deserve protection."

Mr. Mizulin and other trade lawyers say they expect many industries to seek protective tariffs next month