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How Trump’s Protectionism on Aluminum Works in Two Pictures

Production has decreased every year since 2021 and prices have soared.

Aluminum, Trump’s Dumbest Tariff

The CATO Institute comments The World’s Dumbest Tariff Has Been Revealed

With the Iran war threatening supplies of critical, energy-intensive materials, one might assume the US government was prepared for this risk and has been working hard to soften the blow. In the case of aluminum, that assumption would be incorrect. Instead, Washington is making things worse.

The United States has spent much of the past decade constructing a protectionist wall around the domestic aluminum industry. First, in 2018, President Donald Trump invoked Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962 to impose 10% “national security” tariffs on aluminum products from most countries. Then last year, he raised the tariffs to 50% and eliminated exemptions for allies, while also expanding the levies to cover hundreds of “derivative” products – ranging from canned goods to industrial wires – that contain the metal.

Over roughly the same period, the US implemented a web of “trade remedy” (antidumping and countervailing duty) measures on imports of aluminum extrusions, foil, and other products. Imports, in turn, have declined substantially – especially after the 50% levies took effect.

So far, this is a standard US tariff story, but aluminum isn’t a standard product. According to the US Geological Survey, imports constituted approximately 60% of domestic consumption last year, even with high tariffs. This dependence does not reflect “unfair trade” but deep structural realities. Aluminum production is extremely electricity-intensive, and US power prices – along with fierce competition for electricity from AI and other high-value industries – have made smelting uneconomical relative to regions with abundant power and access to the core inputs bauxite and alumina.

In just the last few years, primary aluminum smelters in WashingtonMissouri, and Kentucky have each shut down, and production has declined. Now, only four smelters are in operation, just two at full capacity. And this contraction occurred despite tariff protection expressly intended to boost output.

Most obviously, the tariff wall has caused domestic aluminum prices to skyrocket, rising much faster than global prices did last year, Bloomberg News reported in early February. The “Midwest premium” – the surcharge American buyers pay above the London Metal Exchange (LME) benchmark – more than doubled after the 50% tariffs took effect, and producers have since applied another surcharge on top of that.

US Aluminum Prices

Economists have found that Trump’s first-term aluminum tariffs hurt manufacturing on net.

American supply chains are also more fragile. In one absurd example, Ford Motor Co. reported last month that a fire at its main US supplier would force it to pay $1 billion more to import aluminum in the meantime. (And that was before Iran.) Manufacturers without Ford’s resources and clout have been hit even harder, unable to get needed supplies and pausing expansion plans in response.

Making matters worse, an easy solution to the aluminum shortfall lies next door – or, at least, it did. Canada has long been America’s largest aluminum supplier, thanks to abundant hydroelectricity that gives its producers a decisive cost and environmental advantage. Canadian aluminum is also deeply integrated into US defense supply chains because the nation is a close ally that was officially made part of America’s Defense Industrial Base in 1993. With Canada specializing in primary smelting and the US focused on downstream fabrication and manufacturing, bilateral trade and investment flourished. Today, Pittsburgh-based Alcoa Corp. owns three Canadian smelters that collectively churn out almost 30% of the nation’s total output.

Comparative advantage was working exactly as advertised – until we blew it up. As Bloomberg News reported in September, Trump’s 50% tariff and removal of an exemption for Canada drove producers there to send US-bound shipments to Europe instead. In just a few months, Aluminerie Alouette – North America’s largest smelter – saw its European sales rise from 4% of production to 57%. Rio Tinto Plc largely stopped shipping Canadian aluminum to the US, and even Alcoa diverted around 100,000 metric tons to non-US destinations.

These shifts are already coming back to bite the United States. With tariffs pushing Canadian aluminum elsewhere last year, American companies became “increasingly reliant” on imports from the Middle East, with almost a quarter of unwrought aluminum coming from the UAE and Bahrain. Those sources are now imperiled by the Iran war, and Canadian producers, already operating at full capacity, won’t shift back to the US market while the tariff wall remains — if ever.

Overall, aluminum protectionism has been a confounding own-goal. Tariffs haven’t just raised prices and harmed American manufacturers; they’ve actively pushed a top producer and close ally out of our market, with shrinking domestic sources unable to fill the gap. Given the metal’s role in the US defense industrial base, aluminum-related risks are likely higher today than they were before “national security” tariffs were ever enacted.

Reflections on Comparative Advantage

The US cannot compete with Canada on either raw minerals or aluminum manufacturing.

But economic realities do not stop Trump. As a result of his inane tariffs, the US pays roughly 75 percent more for aluminum than the rest of the world. Production declined.

Moreover, the energy demands of aluminum are intense. The smelters will have to compete on electricity with all of the data centers now under construction.

Realistically, Trump should reset the tariffs to zero. If aluminum industry collapses, so what? We would all be better off with a huge price drop.

It makes as much sense to compete with Canada on Aluminum as it does to compete with Thailand and Indonesia in natural rubber production.

Speaking of which, tires and finished rubber goods, particularly from China, Vietnam, and Thailand, face 26%–46% tariffs.

The Peterson Institute notes tariffs and shipping now account for 15–20% of the landed cost for imported rubber products. 

Trump wants to drive production of everything here, no matter the cost. It’s economic idiocy.

The War in Iran compounds the inflationary effects of tariffs.

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27 Comments
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Rod
Rod
1 month ago

Trump is not good at anything but enriching himself. The US has few mineral deposits that can compete with Al from deposits in other countries; the geology is just not in favor of USA.

Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
1 month ago

An observation that many of us have repeated in the past many times.

You cannot fix stupid.

Greg
Greg
1 month ago

Trump is one big FAFO to the US.

Jon L
Jon L
1 month ago

I’d argue that this isn’t just Trump — it reflects a broader US policy instinct that prioritises production and markets, assuming that translates into broad prosperity.

Trump has only turbocharged that instinct, with Navarro providing the intellectual scaffolding to justify system-wide intervention (blunt tariffs).

..and it’s going to get worse: with automation, even if you did have more production, it no longer means more jobs, and higher costs still flow through to consumers. So you can end up with stronger headline numbers and weaker real outcomes — and that gap is only going to widen.

I think you would bet on Canada right now – a relatively developed social model (not perfect) and abundant natural resources.

MPO45v2
MPO45v2
1 month ago

Dow futures -400. Oil up 5%. Going to be a profitgasm filled week.

https://www.barchart.com/futures

Don’t get too greedy guys, the TACO can crumble in seconds, minutes, hours or days.

MPO45v2
MPO45v2
1 month ago
Reply to  MPO45v2

Oh and bond yields are rising…..

https://www.cnbc.com/markets/bonds/

Musical tribute: Bad moon rising….

PapaDave
PapaDave
1 month ago
Reply to  MPO45v2

The US attacked an Iranian ship. How will Iran respond? One report said they attacked an American ship in the Persian Gulf with a drone. Other reports say they will not send representatives to Pakistan to talk to the US. The most serious report was that Iran will attack the Yanbu export facility on the Red Sea, and close the Bal el Mandeb strait.

MPO45v2
MPO45v2
1 month ago
Reply to  PapaDave

And UAE begging for bailouts….

https://www.wsj.com/world/middle-east/u-a-e-asks-u-s-for-a-wartime-financial-lifeline-3f9ea3a0

But they have also argued that it was President Trump’s decision to attack Iran that entangled their country in a destructive conflict whose effects may not be over, some of the officials said. Emirati officials told the U.S. officials that if the U.A.E. runs short of dollars, it may be forced to use Chinese yuan or other countries’ currencies for oil sales and other transactions, some of the officials said.

Sooner or later, it all gets real.

Got PUTS? Got Calls? Long? Short? Sideways? Upside down and right side up?

Last edited 1 month ago by MPO45v2
PapaDave
PapaDave
1 month ago
Reply to  MPO45v2

UAE is just the first. Other than Saudi and Iran, they are all suffering from an inability to sell and ship their oil.

Suzie Alcatrez
Suzie Alcatrez
1 month ago
Reply to  PapaDave

I bet UAE sure wishes they gave Trump a 747 like Qatar did.

Anthony
Anthony
1 month ago
Reply to  Suzie Alcatrez

Qatar is just as bad as UAE because of the war, if nt worse.

they’re probably considering asking for the plane back

Rod
Rod
1 month ago
Reply to  PapaDave

The per capita value of UAE economic trade with the world is ~$30k. Mainly due to its oil exports. Compare that to US export vales.

Dave Smith
Dave Smith
1 month ago

Take a close squint at the second chart if you happen to think like Navarro or Trump that foreign countries pay the tariffs we impose. It is about the best chart proving Americans one way or another pay our tariffs.

Tony Frank
Tony Frank
1 month ago

The taco economy keeps rolling along without a cohesive plan or competent leader.

MPO45v2
MPO45v2
1 month ago

“Realistically, Trump should reset the tariffs to zero. If aluminum industry collapses, so what? We would all be better off with a huge price drop.”

I can already hear someone like Doug say, “But it’s a strategic material, what happens if foreign country cuts you off….blah..blah..blah”

Here’s my response to anyone that says the US needs to have strategic manufacturing for these materials, just STOCK UP.

Mish is right, just set the tariffs to zero and let China or Canada or whoever sell you all the aluminum at a loss, buy up as much as you’ll need for the next 40 years and store it somewhere. Do the same for cheap oil, rare earths, steel, copper, solar panels, and whatever else countries around the world want to provide that isn’t perishable for low cost.

if it’s really that important you stock up. I think food is important to me so I have pantries and closets full of dry and canned goods. I think having ammo for my guns is important so I have thousands of rounds in my gun safe. See how easy that is?

And we really need to rethink the whole steel for $1 trillion aircraft carriers if they can be taken out by $40,000 drones. We need functioning brains in government, not clowns.

I think doing that would be a whole lot cheaper and better for everyone in the long run that these stupid tariffs and cost distortions we all have to deal with every few years a new administration comes in.

John Overington
John Overington
1 month ago
Reply to  MPO45v2

Hey! What’s this prejudice against clowns? We got functioning brains two.

Rod
Rod
1 month ago

Which two?

Rod
Rod
1 month ago
Reply to  MPO45v2

LOL!

PreCambrian
PreCambrian
1 month ago

If Trump hadn’t pissed off Canada so badly, you could have pretty much counted on Canada for anything (including getting hostages out of Iran if anyone remembers back that far). Then you wouldn’t have to worry about any supplies from Canada on a national security basis. Trump has made our national security worse.

Cowpoke
Cowpoke
1 month ago
Reply to  PreCambrian

Well if Canada hadn’t been ripping the US off for so many years, Trump wouldn’t have had to put Canada in it’s place.

Creamer
Creamer
1 month ago
Reply to  Cowpoke

By letting them integrate hard with China while we’re left behind?

PapaDave
PapaDave
1 month ago
Reply to  Cowpoke

Canada does not “rip us off”. In fact, it is the other way around. Canada provides us with natural resources such as oil, gas, aluminum, lumber, uranium etc at very low prices that we cannot possibly compete with. We take those cheap natural resources, turn them into finished goods, and sell them back to Canada for huge profits.

Oil is the best example. They sell us 4-5 million barrels of oil each day, at a discount of $10-$15 per barrel WTI.

Oleg Grozny
Oleg Grozny
1 month ago
Reply to  Cowpoke

Before Trump’s tariffs, exclusive of oil, the US ran a trade surplus with Canada. Also a surplus in services. The accusation that Canada was ripping us off is nothing more than the rantings of an ignorant, simple minded, narcissistic buffoon who also claimed we don’t need anything Canada produces.

And we need the oil. Oil comes in many different grades. The refineries of the Gulf Coast and in the upper Midwest are configured to take the heavy grades of oil Canada produces, not the light grades coming from the Permian Basin. Although we are a net exporter of oil, we still import large volumes.

This is all concisely summarize by the US Energy Information Agency. In January of this year we imported more than 250 million barrels from all sources. Over half, 146 million barrels came from Canada.

https://www.eia.gov/dnav/pet/pet_move_impcus_d_nus_NCA_mbbl_m.htm

Rod
Rod
1 month ago
Reply to  Oleg Grozny

Trump is the greatest liar of history…what do you expect? Anything he says must immediately be viewed this axiom.
Go MAGA for your ineptitude!

Art
Art
1 month ago
Reply to  Cowpoke

That’s what you get when you listen to Tacos..

PreCambrian
PreCambrian
1 month ago
Reply to  Cowpoke

You need to be able to think. It is basically a free market. The United States could buy somewhere else if it could get a better deal. Any oil that the United States imports from Canada is US oil that can be exported.

Please let me know how Canada is ripping off the United States.

Fubar111111
Fubar111111
1 month ago
Reply to  Cowpoke

Drooling Trumptard moron ^

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