Op-Ed: Nippon sweetens pot for its bid to buy U.S. Steel

As tariffs shake the stock market and impact corporate shares, small businesses and families across the country are bracing for the impact. In Pittsburgh, brewers, grocery store owners, and others fear that their finances will go south as prices go north.

President Donald Trump says the tariffs are intended to create more economic opportunity for Americans who may feel the pain. One way he could make good on that promise is to approve Nippon Steel’s purchase of U.S. Steel, bringing over $20 billion worth of investments into tens of thousands of jobs across the country, including more than 1,000 in the Pittsburgh region.

When Nippon made its initial offer to buy U.S. Steel in December 2023, it included a nearly $15 billion purchase price. Since then, the company has announced a billion dollars to upgrade the Mon Valley plant, $300 billion into the Gary, Indiana plant, and a $5,000 payout to each U.S. Steel employee once the deal closes. And just last Friday, the company announced billions more investments to try and secure approval from President Trump.

Promises are all well and good, but it wouldn’t be the executives signing the papers who face unemployment if plans were to change. That’s why union leaders and many workers have opposed the deal – they say Nippon is overpromising on its pledge to keep jobs domestic. Trump, who won significant support from middle-class workers in Pennsylvania on his way to winning the White House, opposed the deal last fall.

Enter the tariffs, which so far have caused fear and uncertainty for Pittsburghers. Trump has an opportunity to leverage the tariffs to improve Nippon Steel’s proposed deal to benefit workers and to help rebuild communities that have been harmed by the outsourcing of American manufacturing.

- Advertisement -

After all, Nippon clearly wants to buy U.S. Steel, and no wonder. Increased access to the U.S. market is important, and a strong domestic presence would help the company get around the new trade barriers. Trump has signaled approval for the company to be a minor investor in U.S. Steel – an option the company shot down at the end of February – and may even be open to a full merger.

Nippon, therefore, can only complete the purchase by making its offer more attractive not just to Trump, but also to the union workers to whom Trump is beholden after last year’s election. That probably means more cash – money that would offset the negative impacts of tariffs and make the American steel industry more competitive with competitors in nations like Canada and Mexico.

U.S. Steel would benefit, of course – who wouldn’t want to see over $20 billion put into its nationwide operations? But these dollars would immediately benefit steelworkers, including those in Pittsburgh, as U.S. Steel would keep its national headquarters – and a thousand jobs – in the region, on top of the payouts to individual workers. And it would benefit workers across the entire Western Pennsylvania region, as some of the merger money would help fund a workforce training center.

And it wouldn’t just be steelworkers and corporate executives in Western Pennsylvania who would benefit. Increased domestic production for years to come means tariffs would have less of an impact on the prices of those cars, homes, and appliances. Workers across many industries would be part of the Mon Valley plant’s upgrade.

And perhaps most importantly, Pittsburgh wouldn’t lose the industry that has defined its identity for the last century. “Steel City” would continue to provide for Americans as the center of tens of thousands of steel jobs across Pennsylvania. And, ironically, the same foreign competition that has threatened the industry for decades would take off the rust and refurbish it for the next 100 years.

spot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

Health care company agrees to pay $22.5 million to settle claims of over billing

A health care company agreed to pay nearly $22.5...

African and Caribbean Nations Call for Reparations for Slave Trade, Propose Global Fund

Nations across Africa and the Caribbean, deeply impacted by...

Sports betting expert offers advice on paying taxes for gambling winnings

(The Center Square) – Tax season is underway, and...

Business association ‘disappointed’ by WA L&I’s proposed workers comp rate hike

(The Center Square) – The Association of Washington Business...

Sports betting bill still alive in Georgia House

(The Center Square) – A bill that would allow...

States say they get big return on anti-Trump litigation

(The Center Square) – Attorneys general in California and...

State officials reaffirm Hyundai steel project remains on track

(The Center Square) − Louisiana Economic Development confirmed that...

Judge blocks USDA from demanding SNAP info from Illinois, other states

(The Center Square) – Illinois leads a 21-state coalition...

White River bridge to reopen Friday after emergency repairs estimated at $4.5M

(The Center Square) – Gov. Bob Ferguson announced Thursday...

Report: Sharp decline in trans-identifying youth between 2023 and 2025

(The Center Square) – A sharp decline in Gen...

Report calls for $95M a year to boost early learning

(The Center Square) − A report from the Early...

U.S. Chamber of Commerce sues Trump over H-1B visa fee

(The Center Square) - The U.S. Chamber of Commerce,...

NYC mayoral candidates trade barbs in fiery debate

(The Center Square) — The top three candidates in...

More like this
Related

States say they get big return on anti-Trump litigation

(The Center Square) – Attorneys general in California and...

State officials reaffirm Hyundai steel project remains on track

(The Center Square) − Louisiana Economic Development confirmed that...

Judge blocks USDA from demanding SNAP info from Illinois, other states

(The Center Square) – Illinois leads a 21-state coalition...

White River bridge to reopen Friday after emergency repairs estimated at $4.5M

(The Center Square) – Gov. Bob Ferguson announced Thursday...