The Phnom Penh Post

Trump meets Juncker in a bid to resolve US-EU trade dispute

NBC links up for Thai pay system

- Heather Scott Hor Kimsay

US PRESIDENT Donald Trump meets Wednesday with European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, who has dampened hopes that their talks would resolve a festering trade dispute between the two key economies.

“I am not very optimistic. I know Mr Trump pretty well. I have met him frequently and know how to deal with him and know how he deals with others. We will negotiate as equals,” Juncker told German public broadcaste­r ZDF on Wednesday.

Juncker said that the EU is “not in the dock – we don’t need to defend ourselves.

“We are here to explain ourselves and explore ways to avoid a trade war,” he said.

Juncker renewed his pledge of retaliator­y measures should Trump make good on his threat to slap new tariffs on EU car imports.

“We are ready to do that,” he said. “We are in a position to respond appropriat­ely right away.”

Trump on Tuesday crowed that it was his tough stance and threats of auto tariffs that brought the European leader to the bargaining table.

But at home, Trump is facing increasing criticism as consumers, farmers and businesses are taking a hit from the retaliatio­n to the raft of US tariffs on steel, aluminum, and tens of billions of dollars in products from China that he has imposed in recent weeks.

“What the European Union is doing to us is incredible,” he said. “They sound nice, but they’re rough.”

But when threatened with tariffs on autos and auto parts, EU officials rushed to come to Washington, Trump claimed.

“Countries that have treated us unfairly on trade for years are all coming to Washington to negotiate,” he said in a pre-dawn tweet. “Tariffs are the greatest!”

‘We are ready’: Juncker

While Juncker is set to make a last effort to talk Trump out of the auto tariffs, which would hit Germany’s dominant carmak- ers hard, the EU has vowed a withering response if the US goes ahead.

In his remarks to ZDF, Juncker said “we are ready” with retaliator­y measures if Trump slaps tariffs on EU car imports.

“We are in a position to respond appropriat­ely right away,” he said.

Brussels has already retaliated against the steel and aluminum tariffs, imposing punitive duties on more than $3 billion of US goods, including blue jeans, bourbon and motor- cycles, as well as orange juice, rice and corn.

White House economic advisor Larry Kudlow said last week that Juncker could be coming to Washington with a “very important free trade offer,” but the Commission dismissed that idea.

French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said over the weekend: “We refuse to negotiate with a gun to the head.”

EU Trade Commission­er Cecilia Malmstrom, who will accompany Juncker, expressed hope for a “de-escalation” of the tensions, but said the EU is drawing up a list of more US products that could be hit with retaliator­y duties if the trip fails.

Canada, Mexico and China – the main target of Trump’s trade offensive – have also hit back with steep duties on US goods, and have filed complaints against Washington at the World Trade Organizati­on.

While the US claims the retaliatio­n is “illegal,” the Trump administra­tion recognised that it is doing damage to American farmers.

The Agricultur­e Department announced it will provide up to $12 billion in aid to farmers hurt by trade tariffs.

Republican backlash

In an ironic tweet, Trump mocked his European trading partners.

“The European Union is coming to Washington tomorrow to negotiate a deal on Trade. I have an idea for them. Both the U.S. and the E.U. drop all Tariffs, Barriers and Subsidies!” he wrote.

“That would finally be called Free Market and Fair Trade! Hope they do it, we are ready - but they won’t!”

But more voices even in Trump’s own Republican Party are coming out against his confrontat­ional stance.

Republican Senator Ben Sasse, a frequent Trump critic, said the president’s trade policies recalled a past of perilous economic instabilit­y.

“This administra­tion’s tariffs and bailouts aren’t going to make America great again, they’re just going to make it 1929 again,” he said in a statement. THE Kingdom’s central bank unveiled plans onWednesda­y to collaborat­e with its counterpar­t in neighbouri­ng Thailand to launch a QR code payment system, a bank official said.

The system, which would allow people from either country to rapidly send funds to one another, is aimed at those who travel often for business or tourism.

An announceme­nt from the National Bank of Cambodia (NBC) said it would let users bypass the need to use costly exchanges to turn Cambodian riel into Thai baht, or vice versa.

The systems will also allow Cambodian workers in Thailand to transfer money to their families at home.

The NBC’s director-general of central banking, Chea Serey, said the initiative will receive support from financial institutio­ns in both countries and that leaders would meet up later this year to define rules and procedures.

She said the system was set to go public next year.

“This is another effort to promote the use of riel. [It] will allow Cambodians to use their own currency abroad and will prove to the public that it is internatio­nally recognised,” she said.

The system will only work for users whose bank accounts utilise Cambodian riel, and aims to be a catalyst to boost riel usage.

Cambodian imports from Thailand accounted for $15.5 billion last year or 16.5 per cent of total imports. It is second only to China, whose products account for 41.7 per cent of imports to the country.

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