The US Steel Industry in 2004: Still in Need of Protection? |
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ExcerptsTechnological InnovationsCompetitionAfter the second world war, the US steel industry continued its leadership position globally. There was hardly any import of steel into the US as the steel firms in Germany and Japan were destroyed during the war. The US steel industry exported a significant amount of the steel it produced. However, by the late 1950s, Japanese and European steel industries recovered from the war and started exporting to the US... ConsolidationIn the early 2000s, the US steel industry went through a phase of consolidation. Many companies were taken over during this time (Refer Table III). As a result of these acquisitions, around 38 million tons of capacity (around 31 percent of the industry capacity) shifted from small independent firms to larger firms...
The President's Steel ProgramIn June 2001, the president of the Unites States, George W. Bush announced his Steel Program. The president's steel program consisted of three parts: start negotiating with trading partners to eliminate inefficient excess capacity in the steel industry worldwide; start negotiating with trading partners to eliminate the market distorting practices including subsidies that resulted in excess capacity; and start investigation under Section 201 to determine whether the US industry was harmed by low-priced steel imports...
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