Kuwait Times

EU poised to get WTO green light for Boeing tariffs

-

PARIS: One year after sanctionin­g the EU for its support of Airbus, the World Trade Organizati­on was expected to let the bloc impose retaliator­y sanctions over US aid for Boeing. In the latest developmen­t in the 16year saga between Washington and Brussels over support for their aircraft manufactur­ers, the EU is expected to get the green light to impose around $4.0 billion in tariffs on US goods and services, according to the Bloomberg news agency.

According to a list of targets seen by AFP, the European Union is expected to impose tariffs on aircraft made in the United States, along with tractors, sweet potatoes, peanuts, frozen orange juice, tobacco, ketchup and Pacific salmon. The EU and the United States accuse each other of having provided illegal state aid

to their respective aircraft manufactur­ers, and both brought claims before the WTO’s trade resolution body. Last year, the WTO authorized $7.5 billion in US sanctions against European goods and services.

It was the biggest amount authorized to date by the WTO and was a result of EU aid to Airbus that was deemed improper under internatio­nal trade regulation­s. Washington then imposed punitive tariffs of 25 percent on EU products such as wine, cheese and olive oil. The 10 percent tariff on Airbus planes was hiked to 15 percent in March.

Once cleared by the WTO, the EU could impose its retaliator­y tariffs from October 27, a week before the US presidenti­al election. While several EU leaders have been calling for imposing the tariffs immediatel­y if Washington does not agree to drop its levies, few expect it to do so. One industry source however expects the WTO ruling to “open the door for negotiatio­ns”.

Given the crisis the airline industry now finds itself in and the effect that is having on Airbus and Boeing, a long drawn-out battle in which tariffs raise the prices of aircraft does

not serve the interests of either the EU or the United States. That is even more the case for Boeing, which will be looking forward to resuming sales of the 737 MAX once it is cleared to resume flights. — AFP

 ??  ?? A Garuda Indonesia Boeing 373-800 NG with a new face mask design as part of a campaign to promote the wearing of face masks amid the coronaviru­s, is parked at the airport in Tangerang on Monday. The World Trade Organizati­on is expected to let the bloc impose retaliator­y sanctions over US aid for Boeing. — AFP
A Garuda Indonesia Boeing 373-800 NG with a new face mask design as part of a campaign to promote the wearing of face masks amid the coronaviru­s, is parked at the airport in Tangerang on Monday. The World Trade Organizati­on is expected to let the bloc impose retaliator­y sanctions over US aid for Boeing. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait