Biden calls for tripling tariffs on Chinese metals

"China's steel companies don't need to worry about making a profit because the Chinese government is subsidising them so heavily," President Joe Biden says.

US President Joe Biden delivers remarks at United Steel Workers headquarters in Pittsburgh / Photo: Reuters
Reuters

US President Joe Biden delivers remarks at United Steel Workers headquarters in Pittsburgh / Photo: Reuters

US President Joe Biden has called for tripling tariffs on Chinese steel and aluminum while speaking to union members in battleground state of Pennsylvania.

"I stand by you, the American steelworker," Biden said on Wednesday to cheers as he unveiled the latest in a series of protectionist measures in a speech to the United Steelworkers union in Pittsburgh.

Biden, who narrowly won Pennsylvania from Donald Trump in 2020 and has made more campaign visits there than in any other state, called for a tripling in tariffs on Chinese steel and aluminium imports.

"China's steel companies don't need to worry about making a profit because the Chinese government is subsidising them so heavily," the 81-year-old Biden said.

"They're not competing; they're cheating. They're cheating, and we've seen the damage here in America."

Biden won the coveted backing last month of the union, and has opposed a bid by Japan's Nippon Steel to take over the Pittsburgh-based firm US Steel in a further attempt to woo the union.

He repeated his vow on Wednesday to torpedo the Japanese takeover of the "iconic American company".

"American-owned, American-operated by American union steelworkers, the best in the world — and that's going to happen, I promise," he said.

Beijing reacted furiously after Washington said it was also launching a probe into Chinese shipbuilding following a complaint by unions, including United Steelworkers.

Biden insisted, however, that he was not seeking a showdown with China.

"No trade war," Biden earlier said when reporters asked about the Chinese tariffs during a stop at a coffee shop in his hometown of Scranton, Pennsylvania.

Biden's comments came one day after the Chinese defence minister called for greater trust between Beijing and Washington during defence chiefs' first substantive talks in nearly 18 months.

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Economic rivalry

Despite huge differences with election rival Trump on everything from tax to abortion, Biden's trade policies have increasingly echoed elements of his rival's "America First."

However, unlike Trump, Biden has invested huge amounts in infrastructure and green projects since taking office, hoping that it will bring manufacturing and production of key goods like steel back to the United States.

The Biden administration views China's practices as a barrier to that. China accounts for about half of global steel production, while exporting the metal at a significantly lower cost than US steel prices, a senior US official told reporters.

The US Trade Representative said separately that it was launching its probe into China's trade practices in the shipbuilding, maritime, and logistics sectors.

Beijing said it firmly opposes the probe, with China's commerce industry calling it "full of false accusations, misinterpreting normal trade and investment activities as harming US national security and corporate interests, and blaming China for its own industrial problems."

The trade tensions come against a backdrop of wider stresses between the world's two biggest economies.

The United States has identified China as its key rival for the coming century, but Biden has also sought to manage tensions.

He met with Chinese leader Xi Jinping in California last year, and they spoke recently.

But China was again angered when Biden hosted the leaders of Japan and the Philippines last week in a concerted effort to counter China's increasing assertiveness in the Asia-Pacific region.

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