Facing such cost increases, American companies might say enough is enough, pull back on Chinese imports, and begin investing in domestic production facilities. Once they train the workers needed to replace those lost over the past 25 years, they could be well on the way to delivering what tariff supporters describe as a “Golden Age of Manufacturing.”
Less optimistic analysts worry that American manufacturers will continue to face an uphill battle and should therefore focus on investing in the technology needed to do more with less—namely, automation, advanced machine tools and the increasingly well-educated technical workers required to operate them.
Spiking Anxiety About Trade
Already, uncertainty about what comes next is clouding the economic outlook.
A recent survey by the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) shows that “trade uncertainty ranked as the top concern of nearly 70 percent of large companies in the last three months of 2024” and “among companies of all sizes, 56 percent cited it as a key worry, up from just 36 percent in the prior quarter.”
That’s a lot of uncertainty. Some companies have responded by “frontloading” their purchases.
In January, Chinese officials said exports the month before had surged to record levels in response to worries of a trade war between the world’s economic superpowers, Reuters reported. Granted, many of these products are apparel, toys, furniture and electronics, but what about steel and aluminum? Does it make sense to frontload these and other raw materials?
Let’s look at the latter. In 2022, the Congressional Research Office (CRO) reported that, right around the time China won permanent normal trade relations, the U.S. ranked as the world’s largest producer of primary aluminum.
By 2021, however, “the United States accounted for less than 2 percent of global primary aluminum production,” and most of the rest had gone to countries with comparatively low energy costs, including China (roughly 50 percent), India, Canada, Russia and the United Arab Emirates.
The good news? The United States has become a major producer of secondary aluminum, i.e., recycled products like beverage cans, die castings, and some sheets and plates, accounting for 75 percent of domestic supply.
Waiting for ‘Clarity’
The bad news? The U.S. and Canadian aluminum industries are “highly integrated, with more than 75 percent of Canadian production going to the United States, while roughly half of U.S. downstream products are exported to Canada.”
Additionally, the U.S. has only one active smelter that produces aluminum of sufficient purity for use in military aircraft, as well as lightweight armor plating found in many ground defense and weapon systems, according to the Congressional Research Office.
As for steel, the U.S. produces only 5 percent of the world’s supply, compared with nearly half in 1950, according to statistics from the World Steel Association cited by Vox.
China is currently the leader, producing 67 percent, followed by India at 12 percent and Japan at 7 percent, a state of affairs that influenced Biden’s decision to block the sale of storied manufacturer U.S. Steel to Japan’s Nippon Steel.
So what impact will additional U.S. tariffs have on the market? For U.S. manufacturers, it’s a game of wait and see, for now.
“We are working across our supply chain, logistics network and assembly plants so that we are prepared to mitigate near-term impacts,” GM’s Barra said. “What we won’t do is spend large amounts of capital without clarity.”
How is your company preparing for potential tariffs on raw materials from overseas? Tell us in the comments below.
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