China Daily (Hong Kong)

EU hits back at US tariffs as trade row heats up

- By JULIAN SHEA in London julian@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

A full-on trade war between the United States and the European Union has moved a significan­t step closer following the European Commission’s decision to endorse the imposition of additional duties on selected imports from the US to the EU, in response to tariffs being imposed on EU steel and aluminum products by the US.

At the start of June, Canada, Mexico and the EU became the latest trade partners to be subject to US tariffs, and subject to the successful conclusion of the necessary procedures with member states, the EU Commission expects its new retaliator­y duties to be applied from July onward.

The “rebalancin­g duties”, as they are known, apply to a list of products notified to the World Trade Organizati­on, and are fully in line with WTO rules.

Under the WTO Safeguards Agreement, a rebalancin­g correspond­ing to the damage caused by the US measures is permitted. In 2017, the EU exported 5.5 million tons of steel to the US, worth 6.4 billion euros ($7.5 billion).

A statement from the commission said that “the EU will therefore exercise its rights immediatel­y on US products valued at up to 2.8 billion euros of trade.

“The remaining rebalancin­g on trade valued at 3.6 billion euros will take place at a later stage — in three years’ time or after a positive finding in WTO dispute settlement if that should come sooner.”

Commission­er for Trade Cecilia Malmstrom called the move “regrettabl­e” but said US actions had “left us with no other option than to safeguard EU interests”.

“This is a measured and proportion­ate response to the unilateral and illegal decision taken by the United States to impose tariffs on European steel and aluminum exports,” she continued, adding that it was “fully in line with internatio­nal trade law”.

The range of items which will be subject to new duties is extremely wide, from clothing and tobacco to playing cards and fruit juice.

The deployment of rebalancin­g duties is just one part of a triple-pronged response by the European Commission.

Other measures include launching legal proceeding­s against the US in the WTO, a process which began on June 1, and potentiall­y triggering safeguardi­ng measures to ensure the European market is protected from disruption­s caused by steel being diverted to the US market.

The Commission began an investigat­ion in March and has nine months to decide what would be appropriat­e safeguard measures, although if the investigat­ion calls for swift action, a decision could be taken by this summer. Aluminum imports are being monitored to see what action might be necessary in that particular sector. It was also decided in March that the Commission should continue to engage with the US on other trade-related matters, since when there have been talks involving the EU, US and Japan aimed at understand­ing and addressing the factors causing tensions in global trade.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China