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Politically Incorrect

By Home Furnishings Business in on July 2012

€œBringing jobs home€ and €œmade in America€ are themes that politicians are big on touting in the wake of the recession.

President Obama even hosted Lincolnton Furniture CEO Bruce Cochrane in the White House, praising his company for creating jobs in the United States. And while he had a nice time, from his comments at the Home Furnishings Industry Conference in May, it was clear Cochrane believed the president was playing to the electorate.
Imports have come under fire for safety and federal compliance reasons, but of late it seems a lot of folks think they€™re un-American€”even as they wear a shirt made in China or drive a car made in Korea.
And while it€™s unlikely the furniture industry will want to put itself through another anti-dumping struggle, the government€™s been known to take import-limiting action on its own.

A HOSTILE CLIMATE

€œWe€™re in a climate that€™s hostile to imports,€ said Erik Autor, vice president and international trade counsel for the National Retail Federation in Washington, D.C., which keeps a particular eye on products that carry high duties such as textiles, apparel and footwear. €œThe Obama administration talks about domestic manufacturing and how it€™s hurt by imports. That€™s reflected in their stance on trade negotiations like those for the Trans-Pacific Partnership.€

(Autor was referring to the multilateral free trade agreement whose purpose is to liberalize the economies of the Asia-Pacific region.)

€œIt€™s not part of the Obama administration€™s trade policy to make it easy to import,€ Autor continued. €œTo the extent folks in the administration talk about €˜imports,€™ it€™s usually preceded by words like €˜illegal€™ and €˜unfair.€™€

Jerry Epperson, managing director, Mann Armistead & Epperson, Richmond, Va., noted that many retailers are keeping the import issue in front of consumers.

€œWe have stores making a competitive statement selling American-made product,€ he said. €œTake the Amish furniture coming out of Ohio. It is a lot bigger than many of us realize. It€™s solid wood, it€™s very nice and it€™s helping fill some of those retailers€™ slots.€

He noted that €œMade in the USA€ has been a strong promotional theme for upholstery manufacturers.

€œFor 15 years, all you could say is €˜imports are showing gains,€™ and now there€™s some divergence,€ Epperson said. €œPeople feel the fact that domestic manufacturing is growing is a positive sign.€

ALL HAT NO CATTLE?
Despite its public stance, there might be more bark than bite in the Obama administration€™s position on imports.
€œWhile there€™s a lot of anti-import rhetoric, there hasn€™t been a lot of movement,€ Autor said. €œThe rhetoric and the reality don€™t necessarily jive.
€œOn one hand, he hasn€™t wrought a lot of damage, aside from the (duties on tires from China in 2009). I think he would prefer to do nothing on trade policy, because I don€™t believe he thinks it€™s a political winner.€

Autor called the administration€™s stance on negotiations such as the TPP €œthe illusion of having a trade policy.€ While it hasn€™t taken a lot of actual anti-import action, he added that Obama€™s words do have an impact on the public€™s opinion of what is the lifeblood of many consumer-goods categories.

€œHis rhetoric is disappointing and sets an anti-import tone,€ he said. €œIt validates the popular but incorrect view that imports are just bad.

€œImports actually create millions of jobs, and not just at retail. You have transportation, dockworkers and many others who depend upon trade and imports for their jobs.€

He added that U.S. manufacturers often have to import components for the goods they sell overseas and that domestic producers can compete without regulating free trade.

€œManufacturing wages have rolled back in this country, and labor rates have risen significantly in China,€ he noted. €œTransportation costs have further offset China€™s labor advantage.€

KEEPING WATCH
Autor had been hearing rumblings of other furniture-related anti-dumping actions, but that seems to have settled down. He noted that the wood bedroom anti-dumping petition ended up with mixed results when it comes to increasing domestic products€™ share of the U.S. market.

€œThe really significant manufacturers in China don€™t pay as much€”if any€”duty,€ he said, €œand there€™ve been significant modifications to the extent of the duties through scope reviews and sunset reviews.€

In his experience, Autor said trade cases are usually counter-cyclical.

€œWhen the economy turns south, you see an uptick in trade cases, but I€™ve been surprised at how few there€™ve been the past few years,€ he said. €œI think the reason is that most companies€”big or small, agricultural or manufacturing€”operate in a global supply chain, so it€™s against their interest to put big limits on importing.€ HFB



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