Shanghai Daily

Trump not planning tariff exemptions

- (Reuters)

US President Donald Trump has spoken to world leaders about his planned tariff hikes on steel and aluminum and is not considerin­g any exemptions to the measure, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said yesterday.

“I know he’s had conversati­ons with a number of the world leaders,” Ross said in an interview with ABC’s “This Week.”

“The decision obviously is his, but as of the moment as far as I know he’s talking about a fairly broad brush. I have not heard him describe particular exemptions just yet,” Ross said.

On Thursday, Trump said the United States would apply duties of 25 percent on imported steel and 10 percent on aluminum to protect domestic producers, drawing a fire storm of criticism from trading partners and triggering a slide in stock markets.

Ross played down the possible effects of the proposed tariffs on the US economy. He said the total amount of tariffs the US government is proposing is about US$9 billion a year, a fraction of 1 percent of the economy.

“So the notion that it would destroy a lot of jobs, raise prices, disrupt things, is wrong,” Ross said.

He dismissed European Union threats of retaliator­y tariffs on flagship American products including Harley Davidson motorcycle­s, bourbon and Levi’s jeans as trivial and a “rounding error.”

On Saturday, Trump threatened European automakers with a tax on imports if the EU retaliates.

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