Does Biden recognize these fierce political dynamics—for the supply chain situation or any other—and is he willing to confront them? I can’t speak to the former question (lest I get yelled at like those poor pool reporters), but the answer to the latter doesn’t look very promising. For example, the White House was out this week promising that the bipartisan infrastructure bill would (eventually) fund various supply chain improvements, but, as I noted in a recent blog post, that same bill contains Buy America and Davis-Bacon rules that financially benefit certain groups—steelmakers, construction unions, etc.—but have been repeatedly shown to raise costs, lower the quality of work, and delay U.S. construction projects for months or even years. (For more on how Buy America confounds infrastructure projects, go here.) As we’ve discussed, moreover, the Jones Act—which Biden loves—severely limits the ships and workers available to dredge (and thus expand) U.S. ports, thus resulting in “high costs and unnecessarily lengthy timelines for the completion of urgently needed projects.”
The infrastructure bill also pays mere lip service to reforming the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), which significantly empowers our national “vetocracy” and increases both the cost and time needed to complete infrastructure projects. Indeed, Biden’s EPA earlier this year issued an “Environmental Justice Primer for Ports,” trumpeting how U.S. port improvements would need to clear NEPA and other regulatory hurdles that require “meaningful engagement” from surrounding communities.
The latest version of Biden’s Build Back Better plan raises additional red flags. For example, billions in additional federal spending on U.S. ports (to reduce air pollution) appear to expressly exclude investment in automation—the lack thereof being one the key reasons that U.S. ports are currently so inefficient! It also provides convoluted bonus subsidies for electric vehicles made by unionized U.S. factories, even though such subsidies are blatant protectionism and several non-union U.S. factories actually pay more than their unionized counterparts.
Outside the legislative space, things aren’t much better—even in areas directly related to the supply chain. See, for example, a new report from National Review’s Dominc Pino on White House efforts to permanently mandate two-person crews in freight rail locomotives, even as new technology makes that standard obsolete and as European rail systems use one-person crews. But the mandate would fulfill a Biden campaign promise and has been pushed by a U.S. rail workers’ union trying to prevent the implementation of new productivity-enhancing (read: job-killing) technology. As Pino notes, this might be a political win for Biden, but it also has costs: “Freezing the current level of labor productivity on freight trains is exactly the kind of policy decision that makes the American transportation industry unable to adapt to changing circumstances.”
And then there is the deal Biden just negotiated with the EU on Trump’s tariffs on steel and aluminum, which are contributing to sky-high prices here and thus harming U.S. manufacturing, construction, and other companies. Instead of simply removing the tariffs, Biden negotiated a complex system of “tariff rate quotas,” under which limited volumes of European imports may enter the United States duty-free (with anything over those amounts getting hit with tariffs). As my colleague Inu Manak and I explained last week, the system is restrictive and complicated: duty-free volumes set at only about 65 percent of their pre-tariff levels, and quotas are divided into 54 separate quotas on steel and 16 on aluminum, allocated among all EU member states on a quarterly basis. That results in, as Georgetown’s Jennifer Hillman helpfully calculated, 5,832 separate limits on steel and 1,728 on aluminum; thus, “it will be very hard for EU exporters to use even 75% of the quotas given how small the allocations are per product and per country once you divide them up.” The convoluted system will also, per the Wall Street Journal, inevitably discriminate against small businesses that lack the resources to track shipments, monitor quotas, handle complex documentation rules, and carefully time their goods’ arrival. As one manufacturer told the Journal, “[g]iant companies are going to have the clout and financial capability where they can go in and place large orders and suck up the quota.” And the little guys will be left paying the tariffs.
No wonder, then, that politically powerful steelmakers and steelworkers unions have cheered the EU deal, even though, as the Journal notes, “[f]ar more companies consume metals than produce them. When the tariffs began, federal data showed there were around 29,000 steel-consuming firms, compared with only about 900 classified as steel producing and 600 for aluminum”—a number that doesn’t even include the large U.S.-based automakers.
Collective action strikes again.