Business Standard

US partners seek ways to avoid tariffs

- EMRE PEKER & WILLIAM MAULDIN

American and European officials are planning new trade talks this week as US allies seek ways to avoid steel and aluminum tariffs and China signaled it is poised to retaliate if President Donald Trump implements his biggest “America first” economic action to date.

Trump’s tariffs declaratio­n Thursday has rattled two of the US’s biggest economic partners, Japan and the European Union. The two economies together account for about a quarter of America’s annual trade in goods, and leaders from both stressed serious concern over the weekend, calling on US officials to exclude them from the measures as close security and trade allies.

US Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer met with EU Trade Commission­er Cecilia Malmstrom and their Japanese counterpar­t, Hiroshige Seko, in Brussels on Saturday. Officials didn’t immediatel­y comment on the timing and format of the further talks slated for this week.

UK Trade Secretary Liam Fox is also expected to speak with US officials during a trip to Washington this week.

Trump, for his part, appears to be unwavering in his plans, saying at a campaign-style rally in Pennsylvan­ia late Saturday, after the Brussels meeting, that the metals tariffs are his “baby.” Separately, in a tweet Saturday, Trump said: “The European Union, wonderful countries who treat the US very badly on trade, are complainin­g about the tariffs on steel & aluminum. If they drop their horrific barriers & tariffs on US products going in, we will likewise drop ours.” Mr. Trump also reiterated his objective to close America’s trade deficit with the EU: “If not, we Tax Cars etc. FAIR!”

Malmstrom said after a meeting with Lighthizer that there was “no immediate clarity on the exact US procedure for exemption however, so discussion­s will continue next week.” Similarly, Lighthizer didn’t give a clear answer on whether Japan would get an exemption, Seko said, according to Kyodo, the Japanese news agency. “I firmly and clearly expressed my view that this is regrettabl­e,” Seko said about the tariff move at a news conference after the meeting with Lighthizer. “I explained that this could have a bad effect on the entire multilater­al trading system,” the Japanese envoy said.

EU officials have said they wouldn’t enter into trade negotiatio­ns in exchange for waivers from the import tariffs of 25 per cent on steel and 10 per cent on aluminium. Malmstrom, during her meeting with the president’s trade representa­tive, reiterated that Brussels was ready to respond in kind unless Washington granted Europe an exemption—despite concerns in Germany over the president’s threat to retaliate with duties on European cars.

The EU has warned that, unless Washington grants the bloc an exemption, it would impose 2.8 billion ($3.5 billion) of levies on certain American products, challenge Mr. Trump’s move at the World Trade Organizati­on and enact measures to safeguard European industries from steel and aluminum exports diverted from U.S. markets.

On Sunday, China’s commerce minister, Zhong Shan, said that Beijing doesn’t want a trade war and wouldn’t initiate one but reiterated that the government is ready to retaliate. “We can handle any challenge,” Zhong said at a briefing Sunday in Beijing.

The Trump administra­tion hasn’t settled on an exact plan for excluding countries from the tariffs, although officials said Mexico and Canada, already facing broad trade negotiatio­ns with Washington, wouldn’t face tariffs on metals exports for the time being.

The US still appears to be formulatin­g its guidelines on waivers, which may be published soon, according to people familiar with the weekend’s discussion­s. A spokeswoma­n at the US trade representa­tive’s office declined to comment.

In Washington, the planned tariffs were creating some awkward political divisions, as Republican lawmakers in TV appearance­s openly discussed legislatio­n to limit the GOP president’s trade powers while prominent Democrats backed Trump’s move. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, who has frequently clashed with Trump publicly, declined to criticise his policy during her appearance on CNN.

The Trump administra­tion is imposing the metal tariffs under a 1960s law that allows for trade barriers on national-security grounds. “On the issue of steel and aluminum, those specific industries are critical to US national security,” White House spokesman Raj Shah said Sunday on ABC.

Trump said on Twitter that he spoke with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe about “opening up Japan to much better trade with the US”. The current US trade deficit with Japan is “not fair or sustainabl­e,” the president wrote, and he put the gap at $100 billion.

The actual merchandis­e trade deficit with Japan was $68.8 billion in 2017, according to the US Census Bureau. The Trump administra­tion has focused on trade deficits as the main yardstick for bilateral economic relations and threatened to impose tariffs if countries don’t take steps to balance trade with Washington. China’s Zhong said the U.S. trade deficit with China isn’t as severe as Washington says it is and could be reduced by 35 per cent if the US lifted restrictio­ns on exports of high technology to China.

The agenda for EU-US talks this week is also not yet set, but officials from both sides are expected to have phone calls and meetings—though likely not at the highest levels.

Source: The Wall Street Journal

“Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross will be speaking with representa­tives of the European Union about eliminatin­g the large Tariffs and Barriers they use against the U.S.A. Not fair to our farmers and manufactur­ers” DONALD TRUMP US President, on Twitter

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