The Hardwood Federation produces a “D.C. Cheat Sheet” newsletter to keep the industry up-to-date on the latest news from Washington D.C. Check out the June 5th edition below and sign up to receive your copy.
The Hardwood Federation Meets with USDA, USTR and U.S. Commerce
Dana Lee Cole of the Hardwood Federation and Mike Snow of the American Hardwood Export Council joined other members of the wood products industry this morning in a roundtable to discussion with officials from the U.S. Departments of Agriculture and Commerce and the U.S. Trade Representative. The discussion focused on shared concerns the wider wood industry sector has with the pending European Union Deforestation Regulation (EUDR) including the continued inclusion requirement of geolocation information for all logs, lumber and wood products shipped to the E.U. starting in 2026.
Senate Begins Tax Bill Review
The Senate returned to D.C. this week and began work on the House passed Reconciliation bill. There seems to be general agreement that renewal of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) provisions for business will be included in a Senate version, although Senate Majority Leader John Thune clarified yesterday that full repeal of the Estate Tax is unlikely. Maintaining the House provision which permanently increases the estate tax exemption to $15 million for individuals and $30 million for married couples, with future increases tied to inflation seems to be the more likely path.
Senate committees have begun rolling out their portions of the measure. Yesterday, the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee unveiled its draft text. Provisions in that proposal repeal a number of programs authorized by the Inflation Reduction Act, including funding to develop and implement an environmental product declaration program advertising the environmental impact/attributes of products. The Senate Finance Committee, which holds the pen on the TCJA business tax benefits as well as how the renewable energy tax credits are treated, will be the last panel to roll out text.
Trade Tidbits
- The administration is focused on trade negotiations with the European Union this week. Reports from both sides indicate talks are proceeding well, but no details have emerged.
- President Trump increased tariffs on imported steel and aluminum to 50 percent starting Wednesday, with the exception of imports from the European Union…a move most likely made to encourage continued positive progress from the ongoing negotiations.
- The White House had been optimistically predicting a phone call between President Trump and President Xi Jinping of China all week, and a call did indeed take place this morning. This is the first conversation between the leaders since the President came into office for his second term. The White House had not issued any comment as of Cheat Sheet publication time although it is assumed the purpose of the call was to discuss trade relations between the two counties.
Source: Hardwood Federation