If only handling Iraq were this easy: On December 4, fifteen months ahead of schedule, the Bush Administration dropped the tariffs it imposed on steel imports in March 2002. The official reason was that they were a great success; few people outside the Administration buy that argument. The real reason, almost everyone agrees, was that the World Trade Organization had ruled the tariffs illegal, and the European Union and other countries were about to impose retaliatory tariffs on US exports, which they were authorized to do under WTO rules. The unilateralist regime had met its match, at least on one issue.
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Crisis of a Gilded Age
Doug Henwood: Without an energized populace, expect nothing more humane than the rescue of a failing financial system.
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Our Gilded Age
Doug Henwood: Today's elite spend on a grand scale while pretending to be "just folks."
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A Rally in Juneau
Doug Henwood: Veterans for Peace in Juneau greeted the Nation cruise when it docked in their city with a rally against the war.
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The Stuff of Heartbreak
Doug Henwood: When an ardently progressive magazine sponsors a cruise through the fragile waters off the coast of Alaska, the environmental, economic and human realities are ripe for contemplation.
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Blackstone's Bell
Corporate Responsibility & Accountability
Doug Henwood: Is the private equity boom about to go bust?
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Cooler Elites
Global Warming & Climate Change
Doug Henwood: Can the ruling classes save the world from global warming?
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Leaking Bubble
Doug Henwood: The US housing market has been responsible for about half the economy's recent growth, but increasing dependence on home-equity credit could create a financial disaster.
It's hard to view the tariffs as a success by any measure. Restricting imports did raise the price of domestic steel, but this hurt steel-using industries like autos and appliances. The rate of job loss in steel did slow: In the twenty months before the imposition of the tariffs, employment in what the Bureau of Labor Statistics calls iron and steel mills and ferroalloy production fell by 20.7 percent, compared with a decline of 9.5 percent in the twenty months following. But this improvement was far less impressive than what was seen in the broad economy; employment fell by 1 percent in the first period, and 0.3 percent in the second. So employment shrinkage in steel went from a rate twenty times that in overall employment to one thirty-two times as great--and remained deeply negative. And the move only compounded the hostility foreigners felt at the highhandedness of the Bush Administration.
Of course, failure and foreign hostility haven't compelled the Administration to reverse its policies on war or global warming. Why the reversal on steel? For one thing, the EU crafted its retaliation very cleverly; it was days away from imposing tariffs on oranges (produced in Florida) and textiles (produced in other crucial Southern states). For another, damage to steel-using industries threatened electoral losses in Michigan, Illinois, Indiana and Wisconsin that could have more than offset gains in steel-producing states like Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia. And for yet another, big business in general abhors protectionism (though industrialists will frequently make exceptions for their own industries). So hostile was the opposition of business free-traders that the Wall Street Journal opened its editorial page, that epicenter of the vast right-wing conspiracy, to a column by a French critic of the Administration, EU trade commissioner Pascal Lamy, who lamented the precedent set by the United States as one that might be adopted by other countries.
There's a lesson here for progressive critics of the WTO. Whatever its flaws, such as secrecy and the privileging of free trade over all else, there is some value to a rule-based multilateral organization designed to regulate international commerce. In criticizing the WTO's encroachments on our "sovereignty" (as Dick Gephardt did when he described the President as "back[ing] down to foreign pressure"), do we really want to offer any protective cover for the Bush gang's worst America-first instincts?
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