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View Full Version : Business groups scold Congress on 'Buy American'



Fage
02-17-2009, 11:39 AM
Mon Feb 16, 2009

By Doug Palmer
WASHINGTON (*******) - Leading U.S. business groups criticized Congress on Friday for including a 'Buy American' requirement in its $787 billion economic stimulus package, warning it would dilute the bill's impact and invite other countries to keep American goods out of their stimulus programs.

"The 'Buy American' provisions ... will signal to our trading partners around the world that the United States is returning to the bad old days of protectionism and economic nationalism," Gary Shapiro, president of the Consumer Electronics Association, said in a statement.

The final version of the measure requires public works and building projects funded by the stimulus package to use only U.S.-made goods, including iron and steel.

It also requires that it be done in a manner consistent with U.S. trade pacts -- giving Canada, the European Union, Japan and a short list of other trading partners some comfort they could share in the expanded U.S. public works market created by the stimulus bill.

But countries such as China, India, Brazil and Russia, which are not members of an international government procurement agreement, would be shut out.

U.S. steel companies and many small to medium-sized manufacturers lobbied hard for the measure in the face of strong opposition from other business groups.

"The provision ensures that the economic stimulus efforts will have a broad impact that includes our steel and manufacturing sectors," said Representative Pete Visclosky, who chairs the Congressional Steel Caucus.

Opponents argue the Buy American measure allows the cost of a project to be increased by as much as 25 percent over what it would be if imported materials were allowed.

'A MISSED OPPORTUNITY'

They also predict it will delay the start of projects because of the need for regulations to be drafted to ensure companies are complying with the requirements.

"The new Buy America provisions are a missed opportunity to re-energize the U.S. economy in a cost-efficient and timely fashion," said Cal Cohen, president of the Emergency Committee for American Trade.

Proponents say Buy American provisions have long been a requirement of U.S. public works projects without ever having been challenged at the World Trade Organization or in other trade forums, and that U.S. public agencies are adept at implementing the requirements.

One analyst said he believed President Barack Obama (http://www.*******.com/news/globalcoverage/barackobama) set a tone for his administration in persuading Congress to soften the provision by adding the language requiring the United States to abide by its trade pacts.

"The president personally said the basic principle of policy here is, don't launch into a trade war and don't violate our commitments under existing agreements. And that's actually kind of a major precedent," said Ed Gresser, director of the Progressive Policy Institute's trade project.

"I have sympathy for the idea that we need to very pure and set the highest example we can. But the really important thing for me is to honor the obligations we have. And that's a principle, having been said once, that will probably carry on into the future," he said.

A second analyst said the provision showed the United States was waking up to the fact it is the "last remaining trade virgin" in a world where other countries routinely shield their companies from foreign competition.

"Many of our trading partners excel at creating trade barriers and then calling us protectionist," said Michelle Applebaum, manager of Applebaum Research in Chicago and a former steel analyst.

(Reporting by Doug Palmer; Editing by Xavier Briand)

Source:http://www.*******.com/article/*******INCOnlineReport/idUSTRE51F4BF20090216?pageNumber=1&virtualBrandChannel=10112

2Sheds_Jackson
02-17-2009, 12:27 PM
"The 'Buy American' provisions ... will signal to our trading partners around the world that the United States is returning to the bad old days of protectionism and economic nationalism," Gary Shapiro, president of the Consumer Electronics Association, said in a statement.


Mmm...just thinking out loud here...but the "bad old days" ...would those be the days when people could nearly count on employment for life? When jobs had real health plans? When employees weren't disposable? When they weren't replaced by either cheaper H-1B foreign labor here or foreign labor overseas? When the US GDP was composed of real output and not paper value in financials/insurance etc. that blew away with the wind? When there wasn't such a huge gulf between worker and CEO pay? I'm not a big protectionist guy but it seems to me that if everything else about our society is built around the idea of nationalism (i.e. taxes, military, law etc.) there should be a large economic component as well.

Stainless Steel Rat
02-17-2009, 12:35 PM
Mmm...just thinking out loud here...but the "bad old days" ...would those be the days when people could nearly count on employment for life? When jobs had real health plans? When employees weren't disposable? When they weren't replaced by either cheaper H-1B foreign labor here or foreign labor overseas? When the US GDP was composed of real output and not paper value in financials/insurance etc. that blew away with the wind? When there wasn't such a huge gulf between worker and CEO pay? I'm not a big protectionist guy but it seems to me that if everything else about our society is built around the idea of nationalism (i.e. taxes, military, law etc.) there should be a large economic component as well.

Yep, the "bad times" according to Big Business. Better temporary workers at low pay (or overseas) and with minimum benefits so the Corporation can make even larger profits for their stockholders and bonuses for thier owners/CEO's

It's Capitalism at it's finest. Which is precisely why some regulation/oversight is needed (the argument now is if what is being proposed is too much).

Press on.

Notlim
02-17-2009, 12:48 PM
Mmm...just thinking out loud here...but the "bad old days" ...would those be the days when people could nearly count on employment for life? When jobs had real health plans? When employees weren't disposable? When they weren't replaced by either cheaper H-1B foreign labor here or foreign labor overseas? When the US GDP was composed of real output and not paper value in financials/insurance etc. that blew away with the wind? When there wasn't such a huge gulf between worker and CEO pay? I'm not a big protectionist guy but it seems to me that if everything else about our society is built around the idea of nationalism (i.e. taxes, military, law etc.) there should be a large economic component as well.

Of course they do not like the clause, it makes them loose money!
but the hell with them! a country should not loose their ways to create wealth because of large corporations cheap labor operating overseas ,,,,
How about good old Springfield if Corporations choose to leave, they should leave all their machinery in the community and get the small industry and experts find ways to restart the bussines.
Buy local is what we need if we want that money to stay in the communities