Why Is Biden Still Limiting Imports of South Korean Steel?
Biden's top trade adviser says tariffs must be "strategic," but what strategic value do tariffs on South Korean steel serve?

A day after President Joe Biden indicated that he might consider lifting some of the tariffs that former President Donald Trump imposed on imports from China, the White House's top trade adviser clarified that any adjustments to tariffs would have to be "strategic."
"With respect to the tariffs, our approach as with everything in this relationship, is to be strategic," U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai told Bloomberg on Tuesday in an interview with Shery Ahn and Haidi Lun. "All options are on the table in terms of how we address our short-term economic needs, but our eye must be on the ball with respect to the medium and long term needs for the United States to realign this economic and trade relationship."
This is a fundamentally unproductive way to frame a debate over whether Biden should lift those tariffs—which are really just taxes paid by importers—and one that lends credence to economic nationalists' misguided notion of wielding trade policy as a tool of foreign policy. Already, some on the right have signaled that Biden's wavering stance on tariffs is something of a strategic surrender. "Biden should not flirt with a policy that rewards China," the Washington Examiner's editorial board wrote on Tuesday.
This is what happens when trade policy gets mixed up with geopolitics. In a vacuum, most conservatives would favor a policy that eases taxes on American consumers and businesses—especially during a time of rampant inflation. Now that those tariffs also carry the symbolic weight of being tough on China, however, economic reality gets tossed out the window.
But, OK, let's just go with this argument—nonsensical though it may be. Tariffs must be applied strategically. They are economic weapons we deploy to "punish," as the Examiner editorial board put it, our geopolitical adversaries.
Then why are we still applying tariffs to South Korean steel?
South Korea is not a geopolitical adversary of the United States—quite the opposite, in fact—and the tariffs on steel from South Korea are plainly not serving any strategic goal.
Those 25 percent tariffs were imposed by the Trump administration in 2018 as part of an overall raising of tariffs on nearly all imported steel and aluminum. Since then, however, the Trump and Biden administrations have eased or eliminated those tariffs on steel imports from Japan, the European Union, and elsewhere.
The South Korean steel tariffs were waived in 2018, but only because South Korea agreed to artificially suppress its steel exports to the United States. That absolute quota (meaning that South Korean producers are barred by their own government from exporting excess steel to the U.S., even if they found importers willing to pay the tariffs) remains on the books.
Prior to Trump's tariffs being imposed, South Korea was one of America's main sources for steel. In 2017, we imported 3.4 million metric tons of steel from South Korea. Only Canada and Brazil provided more. China, by the way, provided only about one-fifth as much.
Under the quotas imposed in 2018, South Korea is allowed to send America just 2.68 million metric tons per year—about 70 percent of what it exported in 2017.
It should be obvious by now that the Trump administration's experiment with steel tariffs (and quotas) as a means to prop up domestic manufacturing was a failure. American steel-consuming businesses are paying higher prices, but those economic gains have not translated into a meaningful win for steelworkers. Most prominently, a planned $1.3 billion expansion of a U.S. Steel facility in Pennsylvania—the announcement of which was touted by Trump in 2019 as proof that the "tariffs are working"—has been canceled. After a small rise during the first year that Trump's tariffs were in place, overall output by American steel manufacturers has declined.
Meanwhile, inflation is wracking the American economy. Importing more steel at lower prices from places like South Korea wouldn't address the main drivers of inflation, but it would ease some of the pain.
Lifting the tariffs and quota on South Korean steel would provide "much-needed relief for workers in downstream industries who continue to face historically high steel prices," six Democratic members of Congress wrote to Biden and Tai earlier this month, in advance of the president's trip to Asia. The lawmakers noted that the U.S. trade representative's policy agenda officially refers to South Korea as a "valued trading partner and close ally."
While visiting South Korea this week, Biden talked up the importance of the economic ties between the two countries, promising that greater cooperation will "help strengthen our supply chains, secure them against shocks and give our economies a competitive edge."
So…what strategic purpose are tariffs and quotas on South Korean steel achieving?
Biden is maintaining higher taxes, continuing a policy that adds to inflation, and seemingly attempting to punish a close ally—all without providing any clear benefits to domestic producers. It's time to send these tariffs to the slag heap.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
I don't bother reading these tedious tariff rants. Guess nobody else does either.
I actually have received $30,700 in no extra than 30 days via running part-time via a laptop. Just once I had misplaced my final job, (ras-40) I changed into so perturbed however happily I received this easy on-line provide now doing this I am equipped to get thousand of greenbacks from the consolation of my home. All of you may actually do that profession and advantage extra cash on-line traveling following site.
.
>>>>>>>>>> https://brilliantfuture01.blogspot.com/
Biden is a complete failure. Who is willing to admit they voted poorly?
Biden is continuing Trump policies. Isn't that a good thing?
Bad policy is bad policy.
But when the exact same thing was pointed out as bad policy under Trump, the immediate response was accusations of TDS and of being leftist.
Guess it's only bad policy when it's not Trump.
So we are just stuck with a bad policy forever now, since no one can claim a moral victory from eliminating it?
… the immediate response was accusations of TDS and of being leftist.
Certainly not by all.
And the question wasn’t about trump.
It is if you have TDS like sarc.
I recall four years of a cult of personality that went ballistic on anyone who said "boo" about Dear Leader. But now that the other team is in charge the very same policies may now be criticized. What you are talking about requires principles, of which I have yet to see from the majority of his supporters.
So do you or do you not regret voting for Biden?
But when the exact same thing was pointed out as bad policy under Trump, the immediate response was accusations of TDS and of being leftist.
Of course.
Because they were, despite naysayers, being wielded to the benefit of the US.
"After a small rise during the first year that Trump's tariffs were in place, overall output by American steel manufacturers has declined."
Huh. What possible thing could have happened in the last three years or so that might have caused a decline? Can you say leftist economic shutdown because of covid?
No, you probably can't. It's all Trump's fault. Like everything.
Even this article is chock full of it--
Too bad he is not continuing Trump's border policies.
So a vote for Biden was a vote for Trump? Why didn't we just keep Trump then?
The strategic value is the support of politically favored domestic steel.manufacturers in the run up to the midterms. Duh.
lesson learned yet?
You got what you voted for retard
Yep. Promises made, promises kept.
Go read the democrat party platform.
Better question. Why does Biden even have the authority to unilaterally limit steel imports from anywhere?
Reason doesn't ask these kinds of questions.
Biden is limiting imports of South Korean steel strategically but reluctantly.
He wants Korean steel to be safe, legal and rare.
Nobody needs 27 kinds of steel.
"Why Is Biden Still Limiting Imports of South Korean Steel?"
Because he is stupid and wants to potentially create a problem, like with baby formula today.
Formula from Europe is highly taxed so there was no incentive to companies in Europe to sell any here as they can't compete.
Canada would love to make more formula and send it here but up until our current shortage they were not allowed to.
Protectionism hurts your economy, not helps it.
I think you confuse "strategic" for the USA with "strategic" for the democrats.
Think unions, not consumers.
If y'all preached about domestic tax as much as you did foreign tax we people in the USA wouldn't feel like slaves of an international ponzi scheme....
Boehm: Taxation is theft! It's time to send thieves (taxers) to the slag heap! That would require rejecting the initiation of force, threats, fraud, i.e., the worldwide political paradigm that creates empires, war, domestic oppression.
The option: A voluntarist politics based on reason, rights, choice.