Shanghai Daily

China, EU to collaborat­e against US tariffs

- (Xinhua)

CHINA and the European Union have both voiced their firm objections to US tariffs on steel and aluminum, and are expected to collaborat­e closely to uphold multilater­alism and free trade.

Despite worldwide opposition, US President Donald Trump announced in March a 25 percent tariff on imported steel and a 10 percent tariff on aluminum.

The administra­tion had given temporary exemptions for EU member states, Canada and Mexico until June 1.

Shortly after the end of the exemption, the EU initiated a dispute with the United States at the WTO, and announced on Wednesday the start of applying rebalancin­g duties on US products in July, as part of the “three-pronged response.”

In late April, the EU had sought to join the consultati­ons at the WTO requested by China with the US on the US tariffs, saying that it has substantia­l trade interests in the matter.

In a statement, European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker lambasted US tariffs, saying “this is protection­ism, pure and simple.”

“We regret that the United States left us with no other option than to safeguard EU interests,” EU Trade Commission­er Cecilia Malmstrom said.

Meanwhile, China’s Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Hua Chunying said earlier that unilateral­ism and trade protection­ism are harmful and offer no benefits in a deeply integrated global economy.

China has decided to slash its automobile import tariffs from July 1, as part of its opening-up efforts aimed at strengthen­ing a rule-based and multilater­al global trade system. The world’s second-largest economy has also announced an increase imports from other countries.

Gabriel Felbermaye­r, a trade expert at the Ifo institute in Munich, said that while economic damage from the steel and aluminium tariffs would be “limited” at first, they would be “only the beginning of a row of further US measures.”

Felbermaye­r suggested the EU maintain a united front in opposition to the measures together with other internatio­nal partners like China, which is interested in upholding a multilater­al system based on fair trade.

Last week, top diplomats of the two sides already pledged to deepen strategic cooperatio­n and safeguard multilater­alism, as Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi and EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini co-chaired the eighth round of the ChinaEU high-level strategic dialogue in Brussels.

Noting that unilateral­ism and protection­ism are on the rise, Wang said China and the EU should closely cooperate to combat any threat to free trade.

Mogherini, for her part, said the EU is willing to work with China to uphold the multilater­al system with the United Nations at the core, and a rules-based internatio­nal order.

As Trump’s protection­ism creates more chaos and uncertaint­ies worldwide, more resilience and perseveran­ce is badly needed for an open and fair trade system.

In this regard, China and EU, which share substantia­lly the same view on preserving multilater­alism, globalizat­ion and free trade, have tremendous potential in the cooperatio­n to tackle protection­ism.

In response to its unilateral measures, other trading partners of the US are also joining the fight. Last week, Canada filed a challenge at the WTO against the US tariffs on steel and aluminum hours after EU and announced retaliator­y tariffs. Mexico responded with similar measures on Tuesday, targeting the American steel, aluminum and agricultur­al sectors.

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