The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Trump says EU bid to end auto tariffs ‘not good enough’

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WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump reportedly rejected as “not good enough” a European Union (EU) proposal scrapping tariffs on automobile­s, a move which threatens to amplify a simmering trans-Atlantic trade dispute.

Earlier, the European Union (EU) Trade Commission­er Cecilia Malmstroem had said the bloc was “willing to bring down... our car tariffs to zero” provided that the United States did the same.

“It’s not good enough,” Trump told Bloomberg News in an Oval Office interview, speaking of the Brussels offer.

“Their consumer habits are to buy their cars, not to buy our cars.”

The White House in July sought to defuse the trade tiff when Trump and European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker met and pledged to work towards a limited trade accord that would eliminate customs duties, but excluded the automobile sector.

Trump on Thursday also compared the EU to China. He has reportedly threatened to slap import taxes on US$200 billion in Chinese goods, as a trade war escalates with Beijing.

“The EU is almost as bad as Chi- na, just smaller,” Trump said.

He also warned that he could pull the United States out of the World Trade Organisati­on (WTO).

“If they don’t shape up, I would withdraw from the WTO,” Trump said of one of the key anchors of the post-World War II multilater­al trading system that the US helped construct.

At a time when Trump’s protection­ist policies have sparked a wave of trade wars, the institutio­n best placed to help settle trade difference­s is facing a deepening crisis.

This week Washington blocked the reappointm­ent of a WTO judge, increasing the risk it could soon find itself unable to fulfil its key role in arbitratin­g disputes.

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? Trump reportedly rejected as “not good enough” a EU proposal scrapping tariffs on automobile­s, a move which threatens to amplify a simmering trans-Atlantic trade dispute.
— Reuters photo Trump reportedly rejected as “not good enough” a EU proposal scrapping tariffs on automobile­s, a move which threatens to amplify a simmering trans-Atlantic trade dispute.

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