Navarro Misses the Boat on the Jones Act

In a recentPhiladelphia Inquireropinion piece White House economic advisor Peter Navarro hailed the christening of a new transport ship in the nearby Philly Shipyard as evidence of the “United States commercial shipbuilding industry’s rebirth.” As is typical of Navarro’s pronouncements, the reality is almost the exact opposite. In fact, a closer examination of the ship’s construction reveals it to be symptomatic not of a rebirth, but of the industry’s long downward sli de.Named after the late Senator Daniel K. Inouye of Hawaii, Navarro describes the 850-foot Aloha-class vessel as “massive” and notes that it is “the largest container ship ever built in the United States.” This, however, is somewhat akin to the tallest Liliputian. Although perhaps remarkble in a domestic context, by international standards the ship is a relative pipsqueak.Triple-E class ships produced by Daewoo Shipbuilding& Marine Engineering for Maersk Line, for example, are over 1,300 feet in length. While theInouye’s cargo capacity is listed at 3,600 TEUs (twenty-foot equivalent units, roughly equivalent to a standardized shipping container), the Triple-E class can handle 18,000.The only thing truly massive about theInouye is its cost. The price tag for this vessel and another Aloha-class ship also under construction at the Philly Shipyard is$418 million, or $209 million each. The Triple-E vessels, purchased by Maersk Line, meanwhile, each cost $190 million. The South Korean-built ship...
Source: Cato-at-liberty - Category: American Health Authors: Source Type: blogs