plywood – Renew GSP Today https://renewgsptoday.com A resource from the Coalition for GSP Thu, 06 May 2021 13:24:59 +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 plywood – Renew GSP Today https://renewgsptoday.com 32 32 GSP expiration cost American companies at least $88 million in March 2021 https://renewgsptoday.com/2021/05/06/gsp-expiration-cost-american-companies-at-least-88-million-in-march-2021/ Thu, 06 May 2021 13:24:57 +0000 http://renewgsp.wpengine.com/?p=8625 According to new research from the Coalition for GSP, expiration of the Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) program cost American companies at least $88 million in March 2021. Congressional authorization for GSP expired on December 31, 2020.

March was the most expensive month yet of GSP expiration: the $88 million in extra tariffs paid far exceeded the $65-$70 million paid in January and February. In the first three months of expiration, American companies paid at least $225 million in extra taxes as a result of GSP expiration.

Companies in 28 states paid at least $1 million in tariffs in the first quarter of 2021 due to GSP expiration. The map below shows estimated tariffs for products claiming GSP paid by state.

In Oregon, the March tariff costs exceeded January and February combined. It wasn’t just one product. March was the most expensive month yet for Oregon GSP importers of optical equipment and coconut flour from the Philippines, sweeteners and plywood from Indonesia, rubber gloves from Thailand, and wooden doors from Brazil. And it wasn’t just Oregon: companies in Delaware, South Dakota, Vermont, and Wyoming all paid more in March than in January and February combined.

As is so often the case, GSP expiration contributes to larger national issues such as surging lumber costs (WSJ: Lumber Prices Break New Records, Adding Heat to Home Prices, CNN: New homes cost $36,000 more because of an epic shortage of lumber). In the first quarter, the GSP tariff impact on plywood and veneers grew 118% from $4.8 million in 2020 to $10.5 million in 2021. (In 2020, these were savings, but in 2021 they must be paid due to expiration.) The tariff impact nearly tripled compared to 2019. Plywood and veneers ranked 6th in terms of GSP tariff impacts so far in 2021, up from 25th in 2019. It’s not just plywood and flooring-related products: GSP imports of wooden doors are up 40% in 2021 and builders joinery are up 96%.

The data on tariffs paid is a conservative estimate, and the real figure likely is higher. Why? Estimates only capture products that continued to claim GSP despite expiration. Yet imports of many products that traditionally get GSP have not claimed it in 2021. Tariffs paid on those imports still would be eligible for refunds in the event of a retroactive renewal, but importers would need to file manual requests.

GSP expiration is already costing American jobs and raising prices for American companies that need inputs and consumers that purchase finished goods. It is critical that Congress renew GSP – with refunds for tariffs paid – as soon as possible. To help the Coalition for GSP educate policymakers on who is hurt by expiration (and how), companies are strongly encouraged to:

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GSP Saved American Companies $61 Million in June 2016 https://renewgsptoday.com/2016/08/19/gsp-saved-american-companies-61-million-in-june-2016/ Fri, 19 Aug 2016 16:19:55 +0000 http://renewgsp.wpengine.com/?p=7105 In June, the GSP program saved American companies $61 million on about $1.5 billion in imports. GSP saved U.S. companies $353 million in the first half of 2016, more than any year since 2012.

Overall, the value of GSP imports increased by 9 percent and the value of GSP tariff savings increased by 14 percent compared to June 2015. Some states, such as Florida and Kansas, saw much larger increases in GSP imports and savings compared to June 2015, as shown in the graphic below.

GSP_June2016_Snapshot

In Florida, GSP imports and savings both increased by about 50 percent compared to one year earlier. Ferroalloys from Georgia, jewelry from Bolivia, and plywood from Ecuador all contributed to Florida’s GSP increases.

In Kansas, GSP imports increased by 28 percent and savings from GSP by 53 percent compared to one year earlier. Pesticides from India, ceramic sanitary fixtures (sinks, tubs, toilets, etc.) from Thailand, and building stone from Brazil contributed most to Kansas’ GSP increases.

Imports from the Ukraine nearly doubled, led by increased imports of rare gases by companies in South Carolina. GSP eliminated about $560,000 in import taxes on truck tires in June, with more than $200,000 saved on imports into New Jersey alone.

If your company imports under GSP, be sure to answer our GSP renewal impacts survey here.

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GSP Saved American Companies $54 Million in February 2016 https://renewgsptoday.com/2016/04/12/gsp-saved-american-companies-54-million-in-february-2016/ Tue, 12 Apr 2016 14:54:31 +0000 http://renewgsp.wpengine.com/?p=6780 In February, the GSP program saved American companies more than $54 million on about $1.4 billion in imports. The GSP program saved U.S. companies $109 million in the first two months of 2016.

Overall, GSP tariff savings increased increased by 31 percent compared to February 2015. The value of imports under GSP increased 30 percent. These sharp increases reflect abnormally low imports in February 2015 on account of the the West Coast port strikes.

Some states, including those not affected by the 2015 strikes such as Pennsylvania and Virginia, saw ever bigger increases in GSP imports and savings compared to February 2015, as shown in the graphic below.

GSP_Feb2016_Snapshot

In Pennsylvania, GSP imports increased by 52 percent and savings from GSP by 63 percent compared to one year earlier. Primary form plastics and pencils/crayons from Brazil, ferrochromium (a raw material for steel manufacturing) from Zimbabwe, and candy confections from Thailand contributed most to Pennsylvania’s GSP increases.

In Virginia, GSP imports increased by 39 percent and savings from GSP by 52 percent compared to one year earlier. Ceramic tableware and kitchenware from Indonesia, steering wheels and columns from India, and iron oxides from Brazil contributed most to Virginia’s GSP increases.

Imports from Uruguay jumped by 102 percent, led by increased imports of plywood by companies in Washington. GSP eliminated more than $580,000 in import taxes on silver jewelry. More than 40 percent of those imports went to New York.

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