Steel’s Top Priorities: Global Forum, Block China Market Economy Status

Published: Oct 21, 2016 10:50
The American Iron & Steel Institute, a key lobbying force for the steel industry, is focused on two major policy issues for the remainder of the year: getting the G20-initiated “Global Forum” on steel

by Jeff Yoders on OCTOBER 19, 2016

The American Iron & Steel Institute, a key lobbying force for the steel industry, is focused on two major policy issues for the remainder of the year: getting the G20-initiated “Global Forum” on steel overcapacity officially in motion before the Obama administration leaves office, and ensuring that the U.S. continues to refuse to recognize market economy status for China.

“If China gets market economy status it will mean 400,000 to 600,000 lost jobs (in steel, other metals and services for the industries) the U.S.,” said Thomas J. Gibson, President and CEO of the AISI in a conference call with reporters yesterday.

When asked what the position of the AISI is, as opposed to that the U.S.-China Business Council, AISI Senior VP for public policy and general council Kevin Dempsey said, “what the Chinese are trying to present is sort of a legalistic argument that, regardless of the facts, they should be granted the status. I don’t think that legal argument stands up to scrutiny.”

My colleague, Taras Berezowsky, recently interviewed Dempsey on the issue and there’s more on what the ascension protocol is and what must be done for China to achieve it in his article, which is the first of a series.

“The question (that could come before the WTO) is can we continue to use non-market methodology?” Dempsey said. “The answer is yes. The Chinese claim it can be expired. One sub-paragraph expires and the rest of article 15 stays in place. You have to allow countries to continue to apply non-market methodologies and have China make the case that it’s a market economy. I don’t think there is any credible economic analysis that says China is a market economy.”

Dempsey also said that current U.S. law requires that commerce determine what trading partners are market or non-market economies. “Our statute is clear. Nothing will change in the U.S.,” he said.

On the issue of infrastructure improvement, Gibson said.

“We are heartened that both campaigns are focused on an infrastructure bill as a priority,” he said. “The biggest single item is a highway bill. The key issue is how it’s funded.”

Gibson explained that AISI would prefer a long-term funding solution as opposed to how the last few highway bills have been funded, moving money from customs enforcement and other places in the federal budget.

“A user fee, a gas tax, something that needs to be permanent,” he said. “(Funding infrastructure improvements) needs to be put on sound financial footing and avoid one-time funding gimmicks. It leads to a lot of uncertainty. It’s caused some states to look to their own means such as increasing their own gasoline tax.”

On one issue, AISI did show marked disagreement with the Trump campaign. That was the North American Free Trade Agreement. Republican nominee Donald Trump has said he would renegotiate the deal between Canada, the U.S. and Mexico.

“NAFTA has been a success for the North American steel industry,” Gibson said. “It has enhanced cooperation among the three industries, increased exports and, while there was a deficit before it passed in 1994, the U.S. now has a small surplus in steel trade with Canada and Mexico.”

Data Source Statement: Except for publicly available information, all other data are processed by SMM based on publicly available information, market communication, and relying on SMM‘s internal database model. They are for reference only and do not constitute decision-making recommendations.

For any inquiries or to learn more information, please contact: lemonzhao@smm.cn
For more information on how to access our research reports, please contact:service.en@smm.cn
Related News
Supply Gap Persists in Vietnamese Market, Spot Lead Traded at High Premiums
Jun 5, 2026 11:08
Supply Gap Persists in Vietnamese Market, Spot Lead Traded at High Premiums
Read More
Supply Gap Persists in Vietnamese Market, Spot Lead Traded at High Premiums
Supply Gap Persists in Vietnamese Market, Spot Lead Traded at High Premiums
[Ex-China Lead Market Dynamics] It was learned that the recent environmental protection inspections on secondary lead in the Vietnamese market had temporarily come to an end, and some lead smelters had gradually resumed production. However, in the face of the current primary lead supply gap, spot lead in the local market continued to maintain high premiums. According to the latest information, the CIF premium for Vietnamese lead ingots with Pb≥99.99% in June had reached $180/mt as a common transaction price, compared to around $165/mt in May.
Jun 5, 2026 11:08
Nanyang Zhongjie Receives Approval for Waste Lead-Acid Battery Collection Project
May 27, 2026 14:15
Nanyang Zhongjie Receives Approval for Waste Lead-Acid Battery Collection Project
Read More
Nanyang Zhongjie Receives Approval for Waste Lead-Acid Battery Collection Project
Nanyang Zhongjie Receives Approval for Waste Lead-Acid Battery Collection Project
[Waste Lead-Acid Battery Collection Enterprise Updates] Recently, the Xinye Branch of the Nanyang Municipal Ecology and Environment Bureau in Henan Province officially approved the Environmental Impact Assessment Report for the waste lead-acid battery collection, storage, and transfer project of Nanyang Zhongjie Environmental Protection Technology Co., Ltd. (Wan Xin Huan Shen [2026] No. 8). The project will construct a comprehensive workshop integrating weighing, loading and unloading, and storage, with designated areas for intact batteries, dedicated storage rooms for damaged batteries, and temporary hazardous waste storage rooms, with a designed annual collection and transfer capacity of 5,000 mt of waste lead-acid batteries.
May 27, 2026 14:15
Dongying Xinsanyuan's 200,000 mt Lead-Acid Battery Recycling Project on Track for 2026 Completion
May 19, 2026 17:28
Dongying Xinsanyuan's 200,000 mt Lead-Acid Battery Recycling Project on Track for 2026 Completion
Read More
Dongying Xinsanyuan's 200,000 mt Lead-Acid Battery Recycling Project on Track for 2026 Completion
Dongying Xinsanyuan's 200,000 mt Lead-Acid Battery Recycling Project on Track for 2026 Completion
[Secondary Lead Enterprise Updates] It was reported that the 200,000 mt lead-acid battery environmental protection utilization project of Dongying Xinsanyuan Environmental Protection Technology Co., Ltd. was under orderly construction and progressing on schedule, and was expected to be completed and put into operation before the end of 2026. As a key project in Dongying City, Shandong Province, the project had a total investment of 480 million yuan, covering an area of 103 mu. Once completed, it will fill the regional gap in the harmless treatment and resource utilization of waste lead-acid batteries, injecting new momentum into regional green circular development.
May 19, 2026 17:28
Steel’s Top Priorities: Global Forum, Block China Market Economy Status - Shanghai Metals Market (SMM)