Wall Street Journal (April 9, 2010)
Editorial ……………….
World
Tariff Wars -- U.S.
protectionism is hurting American exports.
President Obama launched his National Export
Initiative last month. Objective: Double exports in five years. Sounds good.
Too bad some of our trading partners missed the memo.
Brazil, in the same week, announced a plan to impose
new tariffs on 102 U.S. products. On some items, the tariffs will go as high as
100%. In all, it will affect about $1 billion a year in U.S. exports. Brazil
also announced it's considering sanctions against U.S. intellectual property,
including compulsory licensing in pharmaceuticals, music, chemicals and
software.
Before screaming for a first strike on Brazil, bear in
mind that what it did is an approved action under World Trade Organization
rules. Brazil won the right to retaliate against U.S. exports because U.S.
subsidies to cotton growers contravene the rules of the multilateral trading
system. Because we are in "non-compliance," they get to engage in
"retaliation." On Monday Brazil gave the U.S. a reprieve until April
22 on the new tariff implementation in the hopes that a negotiated compromise
might be reached. If not, we will have an old fashioned trade war on our hands.
The
destructive clash with Brazil is not an isolated case. WTO-approved retaliation
to counteract U.S. trade violations is spreading. More than $3.4
billion of U.S. exports now face punishing retaliation tariffs.
The U.S.'s most economically damaging trade war is
with Mexico. As part of the North American Free Trade Agreement (Nafta), the
U.S. is supposed to give Mexican trucking companies access to the U.S. But 17
years into Nafta, Mexican trucks still don't cross the border, because the
Teamsters union won't accept the competition.
A Nafta dispute panel authorized Mexico to retaliate.
Last year it imposed duties on $2.4 billion of U.S. exports. It's a heavy hit.
According to Mexico's economy ministry, imports from the U.S. of tableware are
off 38%, fresh grapes are down 24% and almond sales 17%. A September 2009 study
commissioned by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce said the Mexican trade spat has
cost the U.S. 25,600 jobs.
The Europe Union and Japan have also asked the
WTO for authorization to retaliate because the U.S. Commerce Department insists
on deciding antidumping cases with an arcane calculation that the WTO
ruled against in 2007. As a result, according to the trade publication Inside
U.S. Trade, both Japan and the European Union are eyeing retaliation. The total
value of U.S. exports affected could top $500 million.
The Brazil trade office has said it regrets the new
tariffs, but "after almost eight years of litigation and over four years
of continuing noncompliance" by the U.S., it decided to "exercise its
right, as authorized by the WTO." It's worth noting that Brazil's proposal
to use intellectual property rights as a lever against the U.S. is a first in
retaliation. If the practice spreads it could have a painful effect on American
innovation.
None of this seems to have influenced the
Administration's interest in free trade. To get Brazil to delay the new tariffs this week, the
U.S. proposed a $147 million U.S. payment to Brazilian cotton producers. In
other words, rather than deprive U.S. cotton producers of subsidies from U.S.
taxpayers, Washington will ask Americans to fork over even more money, this
time to subsidize Brazilian growers. Oh, and the U.S. also offered to wave a
magic wand and pronounce the Brazilian state of Santa Catarina free of a host
of cattle diseases so that it could send its beef exports to the U.S. And here
we thought that bans on beef actually had to do with sanitary conditions.
It is possible that
Brazil will back down, but the damage to U.S. leadership on free trade
cannot be underestimated. The common thread linking these threats to U.S. export growth is America's current antitrade
compulsions, typified by Congress's refusal to ratify free trade
agreements with Colombia, Panama and South Korea. If Mr. Obama really wants
to open new export markets, he doesn't need to slap the word "export"
on new bureaucracies. He needs to honor U.S. commitments and explain the
dangers of a creeping global protectionism.