ferrosilicon – Renew GSP Today https://renewgsptoday.com A resource from the Coalition for GSP Wed, 20 Mar 2013 17:01:43 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.1 https://renewgsptoday.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/cropped-CoalitionForGSP-Logo-ICO-32x32.png ferrosilicon – Renew GSP Today https://renewgsptoday.com 32 32 The Importance of GSP Benefits for Specific Products https://renewgsptoday.com/2013/03/20/the-importance-of-gsp-benefits-for-specific-products/ Wed, 20 Mar 2013 17:01:43 +0000 http://renewgsp.wpengine.com/?p=2205 Some people might think that GSP’s relatively low share of total U.S. imports means it doesn’t have a big impact.  However, for the products covered by GSP – and the American companies buying those products – its importance cannot be overstated.

There were approximately 10,600 country-product combinations imported under GSP in 2012, from Afghani fruits to Zimbabwean wood products and everything in between. As shown by the graph below, for the majority of these country-product combos, the imports come in under GSP or not at all.
Importance of GSP for Specific ProductsFor country-product combos worth $2.7 billion in 2012, not a single penny was imported outside of the GSP program!  That accounts for about 43 percent of all country-product combos and is an amazing statistic considering that importers and their customs brokers 1) need to know about the GSP program; 2) specifically claim benefits; 3) meet certain in-country value-added thresholds, and 4) maintain extra  documentation on GSP imports.

Many of these “100 percenters” are raw materials and industrial goods used by American manufacturers, such as ferrosilicon from Russia and Georgia and ceramic laboratory materials from Brazil.

For another $4.4 billion worth of GSP imports in 2012, at least 99 percent of U.S. imports of those products from GSP-eligible countries came in under the program, including tires from Indonesia, aluminum alloy sheets from South Africa, and metal flanges from India.

Even the value of imports on the low end of the spectrum is deceptively high: $628 million of the $852 million worth of imports in the “less than 25 percent” category come from two oil products from Angola – which overwhelmingly receive duty-free access under AGOA.

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GSP and Indiana: Fast Facts https://renewgsptoday.com/2013/01/08/gsp-and-indiana-fast-facts/ Tue, 08 Jan 2013 17:20:57 +0000 http://renewgsp.wpengine.com/?p=1835 The Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) program eliminates U.S. tariffs (i.e., taxes) on certain imports from developing countries. GSP imports in 2011 totaled $18.5 billion and the program saved American companies more than $700 million. GSP saved Indiana companies an estimated $13.0 million in 2011.

Indiana companies imported an estimated $433 million under GSP in 2011, saving them on average 3.0%. India was the most important source of GSP imports, accounting for about 27 percent of the tariff savings. Ferrosilicon, a key raw material used by steel manufacturers, was Indiana’s top import under GSP in 2011.

Yet GSP is set to expire on July 31, 2013, and companies could face tariffs higher tariffs starting on August 1 if Congress does not pass legislation renewing GSP. When GSP expired at the end of 2010, American companies paid nearly $2 million per day, every day, until Congress finally acted 11 months later!

This graphic shows just some of the negative impacts from the last GSP expiration. It also helps explain why more than 335 companies and associations – including at least 12 in Indiana – joined the 2011 GSP Supporter List urging renewal of the program when it last expired.

Are you an Indiana company that would be hurt by GSP expiration? If so, please take 30 seconds to let Congress know by adding your name to our free 2013 GSP Supporter List right now.

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