Charles K. Djou served as the secretary and chief executive of the American Battle Monuments Commission during the Biden administration. He previously served in Congress, the Honolulu City Council and Hawaiʻi Legislature. Djou is an Afghanistan War veteran.
The reality for everyone in Hawaiʻi is this shipping law stifles competition and inflates prices.
Last month the federal government temporarily suspended the Jones Act. Hawaiʻi’s congressional delegation should now follow up on the lead taken by Congressman Ed Case to push Congress to make this temporary suspension permanent.
For over a century, Hawaiʻi has been shackled by an antiquated law that pads the profits of a protected industry on the mainland while picking the pockets of every local family. The Merchant Marine Act of 1920, better known as the Jones Act, was born from post-World War I protectionism and has morphed into a federally sanctioned monopoly that is a key driver of Hawaii’s crushing cost of living.
Today this results in a needless government sanctioned cost increases that’s exacerbated for Hawaii residents by President Trump’s misguided economic decisions on tariffs and then compounded by the war in Iran.
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The Jones Act dictates that all goods shipped between U.S. ports must be transported on vessels that are U.S.-built, U.S.-owned, and U.S.-crewed. Proponents excuse this regulatory protectionism as necessary on the grounds of early 20th century defense security needs.
The reality for everyone in Hawaiʻi is this law creates stifled competition and inflated prices. In Hawaiʻi over 90% of our goods is controlled by a virtual duopoly of just two shipping companies.
The Jones Act has long outlived its original purpose and is costing local residents and visitors. Pictured is a Matson container ship leaving Honolulu Harbor. (Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2018)
This lack of competition eliminates any downward market pressure on prices. This legalized extortion now particularly hits Hawaiʻi residents hard with the current tariffs trade war and the conflict in Iran.
A 2020 study by the Grassroot Institute of Hawaiʻi quantified this burden, estimating the Jones Act costs our state’s economy a staggering $1.2 billion a year, eliminates over 9,000 potential jobs, and costs every Hawaiʻi resident more than $645 annually.
The original justification for the Jones Act — to ensure a robust U.S. shipbuilding industry for national defense — has failed. The U.S. now produces a minuscule fraction of the world’s commercial ships, and those it does build cost four to five times more than those from foreign shipyards. Yet this anachronistic law lives on.
Rep. Ed Case has introduced a suite of bills aimed at providing relief. His proposals range from a full exemption for non-contiguous areas to capping shipping rates and allowing the use of ships from allied nations.
These are common-sense reforms that would inject desperately needed competition into the market and provide immediate relief to Hawaiʻi’s families and businesses.
A window of political opportunity has opened.
The Trump administration has slowly started recognizing the growing burdens of the Jones Act — burdens ironically exacerbated by the administration’s own policies — and temporarily suspended enforcement of the Jones Act. But this temporary suspension deserves to be made permanent.
A window of political opportunity has opened to make a difference. Hawaiʻi’s congressional delegation should act on now to capitalize on this political shift and push Congress to join Rep. Case and eliminate the Jones Act.
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Charles K. Djou served as the secretary and chief executive of the American Battle Monuments Commission during the Biden administration. He previously served in Congress, the Honolulu City Council and Hawaiʻi Legislature. Djou is an Afghanistan War veteran.
The Jones Act of 1920 was meant to support the American maritime industry and national security, according to its authors. Inter US port shipping was already in steep deline, railroads had taken over and even they were losing ground to motor vehicles, trucking, by the 1920/30s. The Jones Act may have temporally proped up inter US port shipping but with the advent of the interstate highway the railroads were in steep decline too. So now there is basically no domestic shipbuilding industry, excluding military which has a blank check from the tax payers. And the Merchant Marine Fleet that served us well in WWII is practically gone. The Jones Act never worked still does not do anything except protect a couple of compaines serving a few small outlying markets at inflated cost. Let it go away with the horse and buggy. Please
Octagon8·
11 hours ago
Charles Djou,Thank you for this article.Please run for office again.
MauiBoy·
16 hours ago
The Jones Act was promulgated to protect American shipping and ship builders, also to provide a robust Merchant Marine in times of need such as war. I can support that, but it seems to me that the shipping industry is obligated to reciprocate and serve Americans in that time of need.The world is short of oil due the the unrest in the Persian gulf, yet there is not a drop, or at least very little crude oil coming to Hawaii from plentiful sources in the U.S. because (A) there are not enough Jones Act compliant tankers to supply the State. There are by some accounts around 55. Or (B) Hawaii is not profitable enough to dispatch any of the tonnage available to us. The restrictions on size and draft apply only to the ports and harbors.The offshore PAR refinery mooring can handle most any tanker.We are left dependent on foreign sources, iffy at best in these times. There is no access to our domestic supplies, and the prices reflect this. The same will be true with LNG if it should develop, as there is only one (1) Jones act LNG tanker. It serves Puerto Rico. The latest proposals are to supply us by way of a Japanese consortium. Go figure. All the cheap LNG in our own country.
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