Feb. 25th, 2009

THINK!DESK report "The State-Business Nexus in China’s Steel
Industry - Chinese Market Distortions in Domestic and International Perspective"
for EUROFER
THINK!DESK China Research & Consulting provided a 166 pages report
for the "European Confederation of Iron and Steel Industries"
(EUROFER) on the influence of the Chinese government on the local and
the global steel market which was published today. The full report can
be downloaded here
at the Website of EUROFER . A presentation which was given by Prof. Dr.
Markus Taube at the European Parliament can be found here.
See also EUROFER's press
release:
Report shows Chinese state-business relations provoke severe market
distortions in the international steel market
25/02/2009 1:18 pm
Basis for future EU action / EUROFER asks Commission for strict enforcement
of EU trade laws
EUROFER presented yesterday at the European Parliament, under the patronage
of Elisabetta Gardini MEP, a 166 pages report on The State-Business Nexus
in China’s Steel Industry - Chinese Market Distortions in Domestic
and International Perspective, which has been prepared by Prof. Dr. Markus
Taube of the renowned THINK!DESK China Research & Consulting.
“The report reveals in astonishing precision how the Chinese government
organizations are severely interfering in the global market system by
distorting the cost/price competitiveness of Chinese steel enterprises
to the disadvantage of foreign steel makers. We are asking the European
Commission and the Member States to strongly react on this by a strict
enforcement of EU trade laws, based on the results of this important report.
Any further dialogue with China must have the objective of securing a
level playing field for European steel makers. This is even more important
in order to reduce the impact of the current economic crisis over the
next years”, says Gordon Moffat, Director General of EUROFER.
The report reveals in detail how China’s steel industry is firmly
embedded in a powerful state-business relationship. Chinese steel companies
are not operating in a competition based domestic market environment,
but rather uphold very close relations to government agencies on local,
provincial as well as central levels. The Chinese government programs
the development of the steel industry by means of comprehensive and detailed
catalogues outlining development goals and instruments of government intervention.
A multi-layered system of politico-business alliances can be identified
on the national level: ‘China steel Inc.’ made up of the National
Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), the China Iron and
Steel Association (CISA), the State-owned Asset Supervision and
Administration Commission of the State Council (SASAC) as well as
the top management of China’s leading steel enterprises; and on
the local level: Local governments and enterprises form their own local
alliances promoting local steel production activity, protecting them in
the face of adverse central policies. The politico-business alliances
(“China Steel Inc.”) as well as local levels result in irrational
capacity expansion and creation of massive excess steel capacities (pre-crisis
estimation of more than 100 million tonnes per year). Chinese governments
support their steel companies by a broad array of mechanisms including,
inter alia, grants, various kinds of ‘in-kind’ as well as
fiscal subsidies, capital market interventions, preferential tax arrangements,
subsidized loan facilities, access to systematically under-priced inputs,
non-execution of internationally accepted minimum standards of labor protection
and environmental sustainability.
China has shifted from a net importing country to the – by far
– largest steel exporter worldwide (20.7 percent of global steel
exports in 2007). Chinese steel exports to Europe have increased at an
even greater speed than China’s total steel exports. The Chinese
share of total EU steel imports has quickly risen to reach almost 30 percent
in 2007 from only 2 percent in 2003 – with a growing share in the
area of higher value-added flat products. But China does not have a genuine
competitive cost advantage in steel making; cost structures and sales
prices of China’s steel enterprises do not reflect real market constellations
and scarcities. In general, China’s steel enterprises are operating
at artificially depressed cost levels. Chinese steel exports to Europe
actually incur higher costs than those that arise to European producers
supplying the local markets. Chinese steel mills have a clear cost disadvantage
when trying to sell their products on the European markets.
However, the Chinese government is promoting export activities by domestic
steel producers on a highly selective basis. Measures include an intricate
set of cascading value added tax (VAT) rebates, export taxes and even
export quota (coke), which may be coupled with income tax reductions,
preferential export credits and guarantee schemes provided by the China
Export Import Bank (China Eximbank) and other state-owned financial institutions.
By distorting the cost/price competitiveness of Chinese steel enterprises
vis-à-vis foreign companies, Chinese government organizations are
interfering in the global market system.
Please find in the file below the full report (166 pages) and a presentation
of its results.
ThinkDesk.zip
1.55 MB
Represented by EUROFER, the European steel industry is the world leader
in its sector with a turnover of over EUR 160 billion and direct employment
of 440 thousand people, producing over 200 million tons of steel per year.
Contact
Gordon Moffat, Director General +32 2 738 79 26 (g.moffat@eurofer.be)
Axel Eggert, Director Public Affairs +32 2 738 79 34 (a.eggert@eurofer.be)

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