Thirteen groups that represent business interests told House leaders that they strongly oppose the changes to de minimis in the trade title of the America Competes Act, the House answer to the Senate China bill that passed last year.
The AFL-CIO said the House version of the China package "includes critically important fixes" to the Senate's trade title, including removing finished products from the Miscellaneous Tariff Bill, changes to antidumping and countervailing duty law, and the change to de minimis, which "would halt China’s exploitation of US de minimis policy."
While the U.S. is either the second or No. 1 trading partner for the European Union, Canada and Japan, their ambassadors warned that some of the actions the U.S. has taken in the last five years undermine its alliances. They spoke at the end of the first day of the Washington International Trade Association annual conference.
Rep. Adrian Smith of Nebraska, the new ranking Republican on the House Ways and Means Trade Subcommittee, testified to the Rules Committee that the trade section of the America Competes Act of 2022 contains items that could have a "significant negative impact on our economy," and that Republicans didn't see anything about it until last week. He noted that his amendment that would have renewed trade promotion authority, which gives Congress a say in new free trade negotiations, was ruled out of order, so it will not get a vote.
Two bills that aim to fight the sale of counterfeit goods through e-commerce have been included in the House China package, something House Speaker Nancy Pelosi had called for last year (see 2112150050). While neither was included in the Senate China package, the inclusion of the Integrity, Notification, and Fairness in Online Retail Marketplaces for Consumers Act, known as the Inform Consumers Act, and the Stopping Harmful Offers on Platforms by Screening Against Fakes in E-commerce Act, or Shop Safe Act, in the America Competes Act gives them a reasonable chance of becoming law through the bicameral compromise.
Mandating a broad exclusion process for importers of goods subject to Section 301 tariffs, extending the period of the Generalized System of Preferences benefits program renewal, reforming the GSP competitive needs limitations, a ban on importing sodium cyanide briquettes, and changes to the Lacey Act are all among hundreds of amendments to the America Competes Act that have been submitted to the Rules Committee, which has the responsibility for shaping the bill that will get a vote on the House floor (see 2201310033).
House Ways and Means Trade Subcommittee Chairman Rep. Earl Blumenauer, D-Ore., said he and colleagues Reps. Dan Kildee, D-Mich., and Bill Pascrell, D-N.J., "are alarmed by reports of continued harassment, intimidation, and violence against independent union activists in the General Motors’ (GM) auto plant in Silao, Mexico leading up to next week’s union election." The congressmen noted that a previous vote in Silao was overturned through consultations under USMCA's rapid response mechanism, and they say that unless GM and Mexican officials immediately act, the agreement to rerun the election could be pointless.
The 15% tariff on most solar panels and the 15% tariff on imported solar cells past a 2.5 gigawatt threshold are slated to expire Feb. 6, and, according to Reuters, the White House is considering accepting some of the International Trade Commission's recommendations on extending the solar panel and cell safeguard, and rejecting others. The ITC recommended reducing the current 15% rate by just .25% in 2022, and by another quarter point each year, until early 2026, when the safeguard would expire.
A consulting firm hired by the National Council of Textile Organizations published an analysis that says that adding cumulation provisions and altering the Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement's short supply mechanism would destabilize Central America by destroying more than 247,000 jobs in apparel. "U.S. textile manufacturing and employment will be devastated through the loss of billions of dollars in exports to the CAFTA-DR region, and the loss of over 307,000 jobs in the short to medium term," the Werner International report said.
Tariff rate quotas on European steel are really meant to be a gap-filler while the U.S. and the European Union figure out a way to offer import preference to cleaner steel, said Greta Peisch, general counsel at the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative. Peisch, the European Commission staffer responsible for trade relations with the U.S., the General Motors counsel on Legal Affairs and Trade and a former Trump administration trade official were speaking on a panel about the shift from tariffs to tariff rate quotas, and what the next step would look like.