Irish Independent

EU will target Republican areas in trade war with the US

- Richard Bravo and Donal O’Donovan

THE European Union will target consumer, agricultur­al and steel products made in many key Republican constituen­cies when it imposes tariffs against US imports in retaliatio­n for punitive duties US President Donald Trump announced yesterday.

The Trump administra­tion’s tariffs on imports from key allies sent US and European stocks into a tailspin and stoked demand for the safety of government bonds.

The US president’s escalation of trade tensions with Canada, Mexico and the European Union hammered American industrial and financial shares.

The Trump administra­tion’s unilateral action upended the global trade order and was met with retaliator­y actions that could imperil economic growth.

The ratcheting up of tension overshadow­ed reports that Italy is close to forming a government that is more EU-friendly than investors had feared.

The Trump administra­tion hit the EU, Canada and Mexico with 25pc duties on imported steel and 10pc on aluminium in Washington’s most aggressive trade action yet against allies.

Washington claimed it was acting to protect national security, an assertion members of the EU have dismissed. Ireland risks being on the front line if the trade war heats up.

A presentati­on circulated by the National Treasury Management Agency (NTMA) yesterday shows the US is our biggest single trading partner – followed by the United Kingdom.

Last night Brussels said it will impose retaliator­y tariffs on €2.8bn of selected American imports as soon as June 20. Harley-Davidson motorbikes and bourbon whiskey, both produced in districts supportive of the ruling US Republican Party are expected to be among the goods slapped with import duties.

Europe will also take its case to the World Trade Organisati­on (WTO).

“The US now leaves us with no choice but to proceed with a WTO dispute settlement case and with the imposition of additional duties,” European Commission President JeanClaude Juncker said. “We will defend the Union’s interests, in full compliance with internatio­nal trade law.”

The Republican speaker of the House of Representa­tives, Paul Ryan, is from Wisconsin, home of Harley-Davidson, and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is from Kentucky, where bourbon whiskey is made.

Harley-Davidson said it will suffer as a result of tariffs.

“We support free and fair trade

Harley-Davidson motorbikes and bourbon whiskey produced in districts supportive of the ruling US Republican Party are expected to be among the goods slapped with duties

and hope for a quick resolution to this issue,” the bike-maker said in an emailed statement. “A punitive, retaliator­y tariff on Harley-Davidson motorcycle­s in other major markets would have a significan­t impact on our sales, our dealers, our suppliers and our customers in those markets.”

The dispute is likely to dominate a meeting of finance ministers from the Group of Seven nations in Canada. The US has just slapped tariffs on five of it six counterpar­ts, including the host.

“We are deeply disappoint­ed that the US has decided to apply tariffs to steel and aluminium imports from the EU on national security grounds,” the UK government said in a statement.

Germany “rejects the tariffs imposed by the US on steel and aluminium,” Chancellor Angela Merkel’s chief spokesman said in emailed statement.

“We consider that this unilateral measure is unlawful, and that the national security concerns given as the reasons can’t be upheld,” the spokesman added. “The measures instead carry the risk of creating a spiralling escalation that will harm everyone.”

French officials said the EU isn’t seeking a trade war but has no choice but to impose “re-balancing” tariffs on selected US exports. The finance officials said it was hard to envision talks happening with the tariffs in place. (Additional reporting Bloomberg)

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 ??  ?? Internatio­nal trade faces being fractured as European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker threatens to retaliate against US President Donal Trump’s metal tariffs with counter-measures against American heartland goods such as bourbon whiskey and...
Internatio­nal trade faces being fractured as European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker threatens to retaliate against US President Donal Trump’s metal tariffs with counter-measures against American heartland goods such as bourbon whiskey and...
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