Protectionism Ruined U.S. Steel
Another round of federal intervention to prevent its sale makes no sense.

Few people, and even fewer senators, would blink an eye at the news that the 690th most valuable company in the United States was being sold.
Unless, as is the case, that company happened to be named "U.S. Steel."
In response to last month's news that U.S. Steel would be purchased by Japan-based Nippon Steel, a bipartisan group of senators—including Sherrod Brown (D–Ohio), John Fetterman (D–Penn.), Josh Hawley (R–Mo.), Marco Rubio (R–Fla.), and J.D. Vance (R–Ohio)—have condemned the decision. The three Republicans have gone a step further by formally asking the Biden administration to block the deal because it represents a supposed threat to national security. As a political matter, the reactions to the sale of U.S. Steel have served as a nice reminder that the impulse to intervene in the private affairs of publicly traded companies runs across both major parties.
As a matter of economic policy, however, those senators have completely missed the point. More government intervention is not going to save U.S. Steel. Indeed, decades of protectionist policies seem to have contributed to its downfall.
"Arguably, US Steel has been a disappointment since the day it was formed," writes Brian Potter, a senior infrastructure fellow at the Institute for Progress, in his Construction Physics Substack newsletter. "The company's large size made it unwieldy to manage, and it was late to every major advance in steelmaking technology of the last 100 years, from continuous rolling to the basic oxygen furnace to the minimill….As far as I can tell, no major steelmaking technology over the last century came out of US Steel."
Though U.S. Steel enjoyed global dominance in the aftermath of World War II, in no small part because the war had wrecked large portions of Europe's and Japan's industrial bases, it was already on the decline by the 1960s and early 1970s. After Nippon—the company now poised to buy out what remains of U.S. Steel—surpassed it as the world's largest steel company in 1971, U.S. Steel responded "not by trying to improve their operations, but by demanding government protection from 'unfair' foreign trade practices," writes Potter.
Thus began a 50-plus-year effort by the federal government to prop up U.S. Steel. Those interventions have taken many forms, including "hundreds of import restrictions; tens of billions of dollars in state, local and federal subsidies and bailouts; exemptions from environmental regulations; special 'Buy American' rules just for integrated steelmakers like U.S. Steel; and federal pension benefit guarantees," wrote Scott Lincicome, vice president of the Cato Institute's Herbert A. Stiefel Center for Trade Policy Studies, in a 2021 rundown on how protectionism had failed American steel companies and their employees. Even before President Donald Trump slapped 25 percent tariffs on nearly all imported steel, about half of all anti-dumping tariffs imposed by the federal government were aimed at various types of foreign-made steel, according to Lincicome.
What has all that government aid done for U.S. Steel? Today, the company makes about one-third as much steel as it did in the mid-1950s and employs about 10 percent as many people as it did during its heyday. U.S. Steel was dropped from the S&P 500 in 2014 and ranked as the 690th most valuable company based in the United States before the Nippon purchase was announced. As Potter notes, that means U.S. Steel ranks behind the Texas Roadhouse steakhouse restaurant chain and employs around the same number of people as Chewy, the online pet care delivery service.
Would the sale of either of those companies attract the attention of senators or be condemned as a risk to American national security? Of course not.
The difference between Texas Roadhouse and U.S. Steel mostly comes down to branding and lobbying.
"One of the smartest things the founders of U.S. Steel did was put 'U.S.' in the firm's name," suggests Dominic Pino in a post at National Review. While it is certainly not the only example out there, the branding of U.S. Steel (a fully private company, don't forget) "makes it sound like it's a bad thing for America if it's purchased by a company from another country," Pino concludes.
As for lobbying, it is no secret that U.S. Steel has long maintained a powerful presence in Washington. That goes all the way back to the company's more successful early days, when it used its sheer size in the market "to bully other steelmakers and extract money from consumers," writes Potter. "When this stopped working, it used its political influence to prevent consumers from buying low-cost foreign steel. Improving the efficiency of its operations was something it did as a last resort when left with no other options."
Like people, companies get better at the things they work to improve on. Long ago, U.S. Steel decided that it didn't need to innovate to compete more successfully in a global marketplace if it could instead extract benefits from the political process. Ironically, that same political process could now be the thing that prevents U.S. Steel from being acquired by a more successful firm.
The idea that national security is threatened by Nippon's purchase of U.S. Steel is utterly silly. And the associated idea that the federal government has failed to adequately cradle American steelmakers from foreign competition is simply false. Protectionism failed U.S. Steel by cushioning the company when it needed to innovate, and another round of federal intervention to prevent its sale makes no sense.
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What Reason does not understand, and Trump does, is that the nation was built on protective tariffs. It was the federal protection of infant industries that allowed our nation to prosper in the first place. That's why Biden should get credit for continuing and expanding on Trump's protective tariffs.
So you didn’t do the right thing and kill yourself over the holidays?
How selfish of you. You drunk pussy.
Your mom must be so proud of you.
She is. As I’m not a gutless, drunken piece of shit that can’t hold a job. Nor am I a lackey for global Marxists.
Hey Punk Boogers!
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He’s a real Kool-Aid Man,
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Loves death and the dying moans,
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His brain, squirming toad-like, is REALY, really whack!
Has no thoughts that help the people,
He wants to turn them all to sheeple!
On the sheeple, his Master would feast,
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Sure, and slavery too. And expanding use of tobacco. And cheating Indians. And using lots of commas.
Certainly not the influx of millions of sets of hands with new ideas. That couldn't possibly have had anything to do with it. Because immigrants bad. Tariffs good.
Hey Sarc, you should tell Chicago and New York how great immigrants are.
You're calling US Steel an "infant industry"? You have a point about the early uses of tariffs but they do not apply to the complex and mature economy the US has today - and they most certainly do not apply to a geriatric company like US Steel.
Tariffs had their place but are near useless now.
U S Steel needs new management desperately,their
Board should break it up and eliminate the unprofitable parts.
But it's 2024! Government interference here will just damage the American market even more. Japan can actually bring the US back into game and become a thriving industry.
All this, and not a single word of US Steel's history with the unions.
Little known fact: the favorite pass-time of Galt's Gulch residents was complaining about free stuff.
Or about the effects of EPA regulations on their ability to complete.
Sarc and Boehm don’t talk about that. But they rave and rage over tariffs.
Possibly because the EPA regulations will apply regardless of who owns US Steel. Nippon intends to buy and improve the existing plants. They may close some of the worst but it makes no sense for them to buy and then close them all. Transportation costs and lags matter.
Regardless of ownership, steel production will still occur on US soil and thus be subject to US environmental regulations.
Mind you, I would agree that some of our environmental regulations are pointless or even counter-productive at times but that's irrelevant to the article above.
Hey Rossami you are factually CORRECT ass all git-out and I do heartily thank you!!!
However, please be advised that ye are dealing with totally tribalistic ditto-headed Trumpaloo trade warriors here, and they do NOT give ONE hoot in HELL about the actual FACTS!!!
affairs of publicly traded companies
a fully private company
Is Eric confused about which category US Steel belongs to?
Would explain a lot.
As far as I can tell, no major steelmaking technology over the last century came out of US Steel.
What a metric of success!
Lead or die is exactly what we need more of in business people.
This is an interesting topic. Unfortunately, this article is written by a total Marxist moron.
Boehm voted ‘strategically’ for all this. So it’s his fault.
All the kings men and taxes couldn't put Humpty back together again? I'm shocked, those are some grade A top men, after all.
Yeah, if only economic consideration were the only ones. Let's forget steel has military applications, among others, and ensuring a domestic supply might be to our advantage, even if maintaining it isn't necessarily economically efficient.
The biggest lie the libertarians ever handed us is free markets == personal freedom.
They do no such thing. Free markets ensure dependency. And nobody ever gained more personal freedom by becoming dependent. If you're really interested in being free, self-sufficiency is going to do a lot more for you than relying on possible rivals for your critical supplies.
Accord to morons like Boehm and Sarc, handing over control of our domestic manufacturing to China without resistance is a good thing.
Especially if Trump is against it. I would even say Trump broke both of them. Except it’s apparent that they were both broken idiot retards long before a trump ever announced he was running for president.
There are about 4-5 industries that no country should permit to be foreign owned:
Food
Water
Defence
Manufacturing of durable goods
And maybe healthcare (I'm open on this one).
Not one of these must be state owned or subsidized, but all of them are critical to a functioning society.
And mining of critical feed stocks, unless there is no domestic alternative.
Just to be a contrarian - If you look at the composite armor used in modern weapons systems, there's precious little steel used anymore. We're not building for WW2 anymore. Furthermore, the steel that we already have is cheap, plentiful and easily recyclable if we do have a new weapons system that depends heavily on steel.
You'd have a much stronger argument for protectionism over the rare earth metals used in electronic guidance systems, etc.
And what do you think ships, tanks, buildings, and bridges are made of?
Buildings are mostly concrete. Some steel framing but not all that much really. More to the point, buildings aren't in the category of "military applications" we are discussing in this thread. Bridges use a fair bit of steel but again, not the "military applications" we are discussing here.
Ships and tanks are military applications - and see again my comment about composite armor. Ships and tanks are made of a lot less steel than they used to be.
Buildings and bridges are a huge component of the military, and they use lots of steel, in particular military buildings. Ships and tanks are primarily steel; armor is a tiny component of them.
Sorry, but you just don't know what you're talking about.
"Domestic supply" and "domestically-owned company" are not remotely the same thing. As was amply demonstrated in, well, every single industrial war ever. Austria-Hungary had no trouble whatsoever using motor vehicles produced in factories in Austria in World War I against Italy; the nominal ownership of the factories by Fabbrica Italiana di Automobili Torino, S.p.A. was utterly meaningless.
But many purchasers of US manufacturers quickly dismantle the US facilities and move production overseas.
It's not the 20th century anymore. See, what matters in the 21st century is not the means of production (those are cheap), it's intellectual property, supply chains, labor costs, taxes, and branding.
Today, the company makes about one-third as much steel as it did in the mid-1950s and employs about 10 percent as many people as it did during its heyday.
But how does today's production of three times as much steel per person since then compare to other companies over that time?
Boehm doesn’t know. He’s too stupid to even consider that.
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, below average.
The transportation industry increased labor productivity by 300% just between 2001 and 2021. The average labor productivity increase from the mid 1950's to 2021 across all non-farm industries (which would include steel) was 485%.
Increasing by a factor of three sounds pretty good until you notice that everyone else increased by a factor of almost five.
How about a direct comparison to other steel companies?
Yeah, "nonfarm" is a shitty metric to compare to. That includes all kinds of stuff like office work and technologies that very directly benefit from computerization. CAD is way faster than drafting by hand, not having to have a pool of typists to generate documents, and so many other things contribute.
For transportation, the 300% is pretty good because that means way better logistics, but there's no way to reduce the human element of driving a vehicle to the destination. Thus a disparity.
Compare steelmaking to steelmaking or similar industries and the comparison will give us much better data.
There's a reason I phrased it as a question. But Boehm didn't say any of that, he just threw out some numbers and hoped they sounded good.
Iron clad protectionism
Is there a Steel Dossier on it?
There is ore there is not.
Oo are ya callin a ore?
Hunter Biden.
Isn't it ironic?
We should really try and be ferrous about this.
They will continue to make American sections to American grades, because they have to. The entire industry runs off of a U.S. standard. Ex. A992 W8x31 is a section 8" deep and weighs 31lbs per linear foot with a yield strength of 50,000lbs/in^2.
I suspect the real reason Nippon Steel wants to buy US Steel is to gain the ability to sell its stock ticker symbol to Elon Musk.
Remember Pearl Harbor!
Protectionism ruined US Steel so it has to be Japan-Steel?
The very title is a contradiction of sense.
The real question is why US manufacturing (not just Steel) is failing in the US? Can a nation survive on zero productivity? What exactly would Nippon have that would be an advantage over US-Owned? Will Nippon have to adhere to every-single Nazi-Empire regulation US-Owned does? It's illogical to think just because a manufacturing process is 'owned' by another nation it automatically by virtue of being foreign-owned becomes profitable.
Boehm doesn't answer any of these questions. He just spouts non-sense assumptions that US Steel cannot exist but ONLY Japan can do it as he tries to blame US politicians for that outcome while he plays either completely ignorant or hiding exemptions of why it wouldn't be under the exact same US politicians regulation if Hippon took ownership of it.
The whole article has no underlying sense to it.
The real question is why US manufacturing (not just Steel) is failing in the US?
1. Comparative advantage
2. More competing countries
What exactly would Nippon have that would be an advantage over US-Owned?
Possibly a lower cost of funds, or investors in Nippon Steel stock expect a lower cost of equity, or Nippon Steel has useful IP, or Nippon Steel is well-managed and US Steel is poorly managed but the latter's directors and shareholders haven't been prepared to do anything about it, or US Steel's plants diversify Nippon Steel's production capability hence reducing FX risk, or Nippon Steel's management likes the idea of owning another steel company.
Any reason or a combination of some may apply, and this is by no means exhaustive.
1. Comparative advantage
Yes, due to high taxes/regulation in the US, and widespread violations of the NAP by other nations.
And it is batshit insane to advocate zero tariffs under either of those conditions.
Effective corporate taxes in the US aren't high. But you do realise that all the factors you complain of will still be in effect post-acquisition.
Effective corporate taxes in the US aren’t high.
They are high compared to CCP-supported Chinese enterprises.
But you do realise that all the factors you complain of will still be in effect post-acquisition.
No, because the buyers end up closing US manufacturing facilities and moving them overseas. They don't purchase US companies for the physical facilities.
The buyers end up closing US manufacturing facilities and moving them overseas.
Just like Daimler-Benz did with Chrysler, for example? Or InBev did with Annheuser-Busch? Bridgestone with Firestone?
Well, funny that you mention that. Those corporations were acquired and stayed in the US because of trade barriers, subsidies, and taxes.
And funny that they stayed notwithstanding your general claim.
My "general claim" is that we need anti-neo-liberal rules in order to keep corporations in the US: exactly what your examples illustrate.
Summary...
SRG2: Foreign people are just better at production than US people.
NOYB2: Gov-'Guns' of nations plays a part in the equation.
I'd say there is far more evidence to support NOYB2 conclusion than yours and perhaps you should consider moving from this inherently incompetent bunch of morons -- as you infer is the problem.
I think you've misstated SRG2's argument. I would summarize it as "Foreign managers subject to competition are just better at production than US Steel managers" (not US employees or even managers generally).
Given US Steel's historical performance in the market, I think there's very credible evidence in support of that position. If US Steel's were the better managers, then they'd be the ones doing the buying.
SRG2: Foreign people are just better at production than US people.
You cretin. Let's break this out:
a) Possibly a lower cost of funds,
Nothing to do with "US people" - and can apply to domestic takeovers as well as US takeovers of foreign companies
b) or investors in Nippon Steel stock expect a lower cost of equity,
Nothing to do with "US people" - and can apply to domestic takeovers as well as US takeovers of foreign companies
c) or Nippon Steel has useful IP,
...which would benefit US Steel once under Nippon Steel's aegis, and has nothing to do with "US people" - and can apply to domestic takeovers as well as US takeovers of foreign companies
d) or Nippon Steel is well-managed and US Steel is poorly managed but the latter’s directors and shareholders haven’t been prepared to do anything about it,
Nothing to do with "US people" in general- and can apply to domestic takeovers as well. Indeed, many domestic takeovers in the US happen on such grounds
e) or US Steel’s plants diversify Nippon Steel’s production capability hence reducing FX risk
Beyond your capacity to understand, but nothing to do with "US people" - and can apply to US takeovers of foreign companies
f) , or Nippon Steel’s management likes the idea of owning another steel company.
What I have dubbed the "train set" hypothesis for takeovers. A child sees another child with a train set and wants it. And this happens with domestic takeovers as well. (The corollary is that some CEOs resist takeovers on the grounds that they don't want someone else playing with their train set.)
So basically your response is bullshit. It's not a somewhat simplistic summary of my position. It's outright wrong.
Funny... You both just re-enforced exactly what you said before.
US people are incompetent and foreign people are better.
Protectionism Ruined U.S. Steel
Chinese economic warfare and slave labor ruined US steel.
Which is precisely why we have "protectionist" policies to maintain a US steel industry.
+10000 Well said.
+ US Environmentalism “Protectionism”
Perhaps Boehm is just retarded about what kind of “Protectionism” ruined U.S. Steel.?
"Protectionism has failed! We demand MORE PROTECTION!"
Not only is this a good reminder that the politicians have always been, are now, and will always be clueless about both economics and the economic consequences of their interventions; it is also a reminder that no libertarian in her right mind would ever claim that free markets are a solution to every problem! The most any libertarian can ever reasonably claim is that the least possible government involvement in the market place always results in a better economic outcome than any other alternative system, by any measure you want to choose. The problem is that it is never possible to know for sure what would have happened if government had not meddled.
Pretty sure the US Constitution pegs it dead center ... "to regulate commerce with foreign nations" ... of which the USA has no ability to ensure fair-play in outside of treaties that can be broken.
While having ZERO authority for Inner-State domestic regulation and only among State trade disputes and Indian Tribes.
Problem is... Our Nazi-Empire does everything the US Constitution forbids and won't do anything the US Constitution authorizes/demands (like protection from invasion).