New Tariffs on Tin Cans Get Biden Administration Approval
There's no good reason for the government to block Americans' access to cheaper tin cans.

The Commerce Department has officially declared a trade war on cheap tin cans.
Last week, the department gave a green light to placing new tariffs on tinplate steel—the metal used to manufacture tin cans and a wide variety of other consumer goods—imported from Canada, China, Germany, and South Korea. While the new tariffs are far less extensive than the absurdly high trade barriers originally requested by Cleveland-Cliffs, an Ohio-based steel company that is one of the few companies in America to make tinplate steel, the tariff decision once again underlines the arbitrary and cronyist nature of federal trade policy.
As Reason previously reported, Cleveland-Cliffs had asked the Biden administration to slap tariffs of up to 300 percent on tinplate steel imported from eight countries. Because the tariff-petition process is heavily skewed in favor of companies seeking protectionism—among other things, the Commerce Department is forbidden from considering how higher tariffs might impact other parts of the economy, including consumers—industries that need reliable access to tinplate steel were prepared to take a hit.
The Consumer Brands Association (CBA), which represents more than 2,000 companies including Campbell Soup Company and other brands that stood to be harmed by the tariffs, estimated that Cleveland-Cliffs' proposed tariffs would have added about 58 cents to the cost of the average canned food product. A separate study by the Trade Partnership Worldwide LLC, a pro-trade think tank, found that 600 jobs would be put at risk for every steel-making job protected by the proposed tariffs.
Last week's announcement from the Commerce Department triggered sighs of relief. The department rejected Cleveland-Cliffs' proposal for tariffs on tinplate steel imported from the Netherlands, Taiwan, Turkey, and the United Kingdom, and the tariffs approved on other imports are significantly lower than what had been requested.
"The Department of Commerce's final duty levels on imports of tin mill steel products largely reject incredulous claims from Cleveland-Cliffs that would have significantly hurt consumers and domestic manufacturing jobs," David Chavern, president and CEO of the Consumer Brands Association, which opposed the imposition of the tariffs, said in a statement.
The final word on the tariffs falls to the International Trade Commission (ITC), which must give its own approval to the Commerce Department's decision before the duties are put in place. The ITC heard testimony on the proposed tinplate steel tariffs and is expected to vote on the proposed tinplate steel tariffs at its meeting in February.
Still, the whole process leaves a bad taste in one's mouth. A single American company was able to file a petition asking unelected bureaucrats to punish its competitors (along with many downstream businesses and consumers) in order to goose its bottom line, triggering a review process that cost taxpayer resources and forced other businesses to play defense in a game that's deliberately rigged against them.
That the end result is merely less terrible for consumers than it might have otherwise been is a small comfort. There's no good reason for the government to block Americans' access to cheaper tin cans.
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But have you considered that if two people have tin cans and a piece of string, they could have a discreet conversation of which there’s no record ever made! That’s an imminent security threat, the government has a pressing security need to know who the population is communicating with.
It’s about time that string was recognized as a controlled substance.
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Hey, what's this second string for, and where does it go?
Taxing Chinese imports, probably made by Uyghur slaves, to prop up domestic industry?
Principled Trump supporters should applaud this move by Biden and condemn Reason for criticizing it.
If we know they're made by slaves/political prisoners, I don't see the problem with tariffs or outright bans.
It'd be nice if income taxes could come down as tariffs go up though.
And as always, a hearty "Fuck you, cut spending".
Look up what portion of the budget is funded by tariffs, as in what increasing them could offset, and then get back to me on them being anything other than political.
Are you going to tell us what a P.O.S. Biden is for these Tariffs or not? You sure did over and over and over again when Trump did them.
These tariffs weren't put in place purely by presidential fiat. That said, they're still bullshit.
Both Reason and I have said more than once that one of Biden's big mistakes was and is not rolling back the Trump tariffs.
Well, it's a good thing that we got rid of that uncouth economic illiterate we previously had in the White House, and all those nasty trade-restricting tariffs!
"The final word on the tariffs falls to the International Trade Commission (ITC)..." Who elected THEM? The income tax was sold by the People's Party as replacement for the tariff. That failed. The Obvious solution is to repeal the income tax that failed to replace the tariff. America would again have policies not invented by Chinese or British imperialists and folded into our jurisprudence by China, the Hague or League of Nations cartels. Surely the USSR demonstrated the failure of Marx's 10-point platform, no?
If it's a free country, why are there no tin mines?
https://www.sciencebase.gov/catalog/item/imap/5ae87432e4b0e2c2dd358003
"Tin has not been produced in the United States since 1993, and with the United States not having any active tin reserves the commodity has been deemed a critical strategic metal (Kamilli and others, 2017). As of 2017, the United States maintains a net import reliance as a percentage of apparent consumption of approximately 75 percent for tin, where 25 percent of the apparent consumption is attributed to the recycling of tin (U.S. Geological Survey, 2018)."
https://www.sciencebase.gov/catalog/item/5ae87432e4b0e2c2dd358003
Can always just go mining the tin roofs in the redneck areas.
That's galvanized steel roofing, plated with zinc, not tin. Scratch through the zinc coating and it forms an electrochemical cell where slow corrosion of the zinc protects the base metal. (Not forever, but the zinc typically lasts for years while the steel holds its strength until the zinc is gone.) Scratch through tin plate, and the electrochemical cell formed eats the steel first - and rapidly.
But they don't galvanize cans for food because zinc reacts with food in unpleasant ways.
The Biden administration has delivered a big win to environmentalists and a potentially fatal blow to backers of a proposed copper-nickel mine near the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness.
Biden administration imposes 20-year mining ban on 225,000 acres of northern Minnesota
Obama-era restriction that had blocked a controversial mining project in Alaska.
Biden to Release Regulations to Kill Coal Plants
Obama Kept His Promise, 83,000 Coal Jobs Lost And 400 Mines Shuttered
Eco regulations force massive coal plant to shut down
It's a mystery... /s
Some tin wrong.
By charging the U.S. consumer more for canned food, we will show the Chinese that we mean business.
I think this makes sense....
Maybe I missed this in the article but how much more will canned food cost because of this tariff? 2 cents? 5 cents?
It was in the article. ~$.58/can
Now, see, we've been trying to figure out what slanted HyR's obvious editorial line against Trump and in favor of Biden, and one hypothesis sometimes advanced here is that it's about priorities: that free trade is so important that Trump's protectionist rhetoric, even if not backed by much action, so frightens the Kochtopus that it overshadows other policy considerations. But Biden is so much worse on this score that the hypothesis is not credible.
This isn't hard.
"While the new tariffs are far less extensive than the absurdly high trade barriers originally requested by Cleveland-Cliffs"
How much does Cleveland-Cliffs pay to the national government each year? Apply the same for imports of the same.
Easy peasy.
When did the government need a good reason to do something?
But when Trump did them, tariffs were a bad thing. Guess the magic (D) really does work.