Trump's Commerce pick
Wilbur Ross is no stranger to protectionism
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[January 17, 2017]
By Roberta Rampton and David Lawder
WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - When billionaire investor Wilbur Ross salvaged two North
Carolina textile mills from bankruptcy in 2003 and 2004, one of the
first things he did was head to Washington to immerse himself in trade
law and policy.
China's accession to the World Trade Organization had unleashed a flood
of textile imports across U.S. borders, and Ross - now President-elect
Donald Trump's pick for commerce secretary - took an unusual hands-on
approach, advocating for "safeguard" tariffs to help the ravaged
domestic industry.
"He was not the first outside investor to come into the industry and buy
a major asset. He was the first and to my knowledge only major outside
investor who took on that same sort of attitude that the more home-grown
CEOs had,” said Auggie Tantillo, who has lobbied for textile makers in
Washington for almost 40 years.
Ross' history owning and defending embattled steel and textile
manufacturing companies that have relied on border duties to protect
their industries means he will bring a unique approach to the commerce
secretary job, departing from the traditional role of cheerleading for
free trade and big business.
In a questionnaire ahead of a U.S. Senate hearing to review his
nomination - which had been slated for Thursday - Ross said he had owned
or had a significant stake in more than 100 businesses over 55 years.
Forbes has estimated his fortune at $2.9 billion. Ross has not yet
provided the Senate with financial disclosures or an ethics agreement to
prevent conflicts of interest.
Late on Tuesday, the Senate Commerce Committee said it would postpone
Ross' hearing until Jan. 18 to give more time to ethics officials to do
their work.
Ross is one of three wealthy Trump picks to run into delays with the
vetting process. Education nominee Betsy DeVos and Labor pick Andrew
Pudzer have also had their Senate hearings pushed back.
'MR. PROTECTIONISM'
The Economist has called Ross "Mr. Protectionism," a term Ross told CNBC
he saw as "pejorative" and inaccurate because he said the threat of
tariffs would be a used as a negotiating tool.
If confirmed, Ross, 79, who is personally close to Trump, will be a lead
player shaping U.S. trade policy, working alongside Robert Lighthizer, a
lawyer known for his work with beleaguered U.S. manufacturers whom Trump
has tapped as U.S. trade representative, and Peter Navarro, an economist
and China hawk who will serve as a White House adviser.
Free trade advocates worry the Trump trade triumvirate will be too quick
to use tariffs to keep imports out, raising costs for manufacturers that
rely on imported parts - or even sparking retaliatory trade wars.
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Billionaire investor Wilbur Ross, chairman of Invesco Ltd subsidiary
WL Ross & Co, departs Trump Tower after a meeting with U.S.
President-elect Donald Trump in New York, U.S., November 29, 2016.
REUTERS/Lucas Jackson/File Photo
"The
three of them - those guys put together - can create a lot of mischief," said
Dan Ikenson, a longtime trade policy economist now with the Cato Institute think
tank.
Ross
did not respond to a request for comment. A spokesman for Trump's transition
team said Ross would draw on his experience "saving and creating" manufacturing
jobs if confirmed, and would push to expand exports and reduce imports.
Ross has worked with allies in labor unions and other industry groups hurt by
imports to push for tariffs and quotas, even starting his own coalition in 2003.
Although the coalition was short-lived, Ross's trade rhetoric about the trade
deficit and currency manipulation has remained consistent - and was echoed on
the campaign trail by Trump.
Ross called the 20-year-old North American Free Trade Agreement with Mexico and
Canada the "poster child for unbalanced trade and investment," in a letter to
The Wall Street Journal.
He has accused Mexico of importing auto parts from China for vehicles it shipped
duty-free into the United States.
But
his companies have also produced goods in Mexico. The 2007 annual report for his
International Textile Group called NAFTA "advantageous to the company" because
of its factories there.
Ross supported the Central America Free Trade Agreement, saying he believed it
fixed some of what he saw as loopholes in NAFTA.
Ross has drawn an unusual endorsement - from the United Steelworkers union,
which backed Trump's Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton, in the election.
Leo Gerard, president of the USW, said in an interview last month that Trump's
team understood that trade remedy laws themselves needed to be modernized to
make it easier to impose sanctions and duties before industries are hurt and
jobs are lost.
"We have a lot of suggestions for when there's a new trade team," Gerard told
Reuters.
(Additional reporting by Andy Sullivan; Editing by Leslie Adler and Peter
Cooney)
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