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Biden may triple tariffs on Chinese steel and aluminum

President Biden will use a visit to the United Steelworkers headquarters in Pittsburgh today to announce that his administration is considering tripling tariffs on Chinese steel and aluminum.

Why it matters: Biden is determined not to allow former President Trump to outflank him on who is tougher on China. He's also bent on winning Pennsylvania, a state he considers a second home.


  • So Biden will zero in on steel and shipbuilding as industries that need protection from cheaper Chinese imports.
  • "China's subsidies and other forms of support lead to exports flooding global markets at artificially low prices, undercutting American steel," National Economic Council Director Lael Brainard told reporters late Tuesday.
  • "China cannot export its way to recovery," she said.

Driving the news: Biden will direct Katherine Tai, the United States trade representative, to open an investigation into China's alleged subsidies for its shipbuilders. The probe was requested by five labor unions.

  • Steel and aluminum imports from China currently face 7.5% tariffs under Section 301 of Trade Act of 1974. Biden is directing Tai to consider raising them to 25%.

Between the lines: Biden isn't imposing new tariffs with the stroke of his pen.

  • But — like he did with the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States' review of Nippon Steel's bid for U.S. Steel — he's giving a strong hint of where he wants Tai to eventually land.
  • The shipbuilding probe will be part of Biden's overall review of Trump's tariffs on some $300 billion worth of Chinese imports.

What we're watching: Biden has kept those tariffs on the books and is likely to extend them with a few modifications — including efforts to protect America's electric vehicle industry.

  • Increasing the steel and aluminum tariffs would be a highly symbolic way for Biden to claim that his Section 301 tariffs are more strategic than Trump's.

The other side: Trump also is talking tough on China and has floated tariffs of up to 60% on all imported Chinese products.

Go deeper: Biden has made a manufacturing renaissance one of the keystones of presidency, with a some $50 billion to bolster American's semiconductor industry and another $370 billion to boost the green energy and technology industries.

  • For several weeks, Biden officials have been warning about China's growth trajectory and putting Beijing on notice that it shouldn't try to export the excess capacity in its economy.
  • Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen used her trip to China this month to warn of the global risks stemming from China's excess capacity.
  • The fear is China will rattle the global economy by creating too many exports, disrupting U.S.-based industries in the process.
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