The New Zealand Herald

Trade compromise

Shadow of tariffs hangs over summit

- John Follain and Josh Wingrove

World leaders reached a compromise on trade at the Group of 20 summit as officials agreed to fight protection­ism while tacitly recognisin­g US President Donald Trump’s concerns about excess steel capacity and what he says are unfair trade practices.

Hours after the agreement was struck, the final statement nonetheles­s left the US isolated on climate change, according to officials from three G-20 countries. At the same time, the statement refers to the use of “trade defence instrument­s”, leaving the shadow of tariffs hanging over the world.

Talks ran into a major rift over global economic policy on Saturday as Trump, who spent much of his election campaign complainin­g about “unfair” trade hurting the US, held firm to his America First doctrine.

G-20 officials are concerned about a trade war over steel as Trump gears up for a decision on whether to impose punitive tariffs amid ongoing complaints about dumping on global markets.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, the summit’s host, said that leaders needed to find a common solution to steel overproduc­tion, otherwise the risk of “bilateral actions” increased.

In its communique, the G-20 pledged renewed efforts to combat excess capacity in the steel industry, according to a leaked copy of the text.

“We will keep markets open, noting the importance of reciprocal and mutually advantageo­us trade and investment frameworks,” according to the draft statement. The G-20 will “continue to fight protection­ism including all unfair trade practices and recognise the rule of legitimate trade defence instrument­s in this regard”.

Trump’s administra­tion is weighing whether to impose tariffs, quotas or a combinatio­n of both on steel imports under national security grounds through Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act, even though only a fraction of US steel is used for defence. Trump’s Commerce Department launched its review in April, missed a self-imposed deadline for a decision last month and is expected to announce a verdict soon.

“We stand united in opposition to protection­ism, that I think will be a positive outcome from this meeting,” Canadian Finance Minister Bill Morneau told reporters in Hamburg.

“What I believe to be the case is we all recognise the importance of trade to our economies, the importance of trade to growth, and the difficulti­es protection­ism presents. That’s a subject that has reached consensus.”

The final statement underlined Trump’s lone stand on climate change, saying that all G-20 members except for the US “state that the Paris Agreement is irreversib­le”, according to several officials.

In the statement, the US announced that “it will immediatel­y cease the implementa­tion of its current nationally-determined contributi­on and affirms its strong commitment to an approach that lowers emissions while supporting economic growth and improving energy security needs”.

During a working lunch, Trump stressed that he would always defend the American worker, according to a western diplomatic official familiar with the closed-door session.

French President Emmanuel Macron challenged Trump’s view that the US is losing out on trade, the official said. Taking out his mobile phone, Macron said that when he bought it, he created a trade deficit with the US, but that when America built it, it created a trade deficit with China. His point was that it doesn’t make sense to talk about bilateral trade deficits in a multilater­al world, the official said. The exchange illustrate­s the world’s struggle to come to terms with the Trump era and his administra­tion’s determinat­ion to remould the postwar global consensus in favour of the US. The last major summit, of G-7 leaders in May, ended with the US isolated on climate change. Yesterday’s sessions were dedicated to tackling migration and a “partnershi­p with Africa”, digitalisa­tion, empowering women and employment.

We stand united in opposition to protection­ism, that I think will be a positive outcome from this meeting. Bill Morneau, Canadian Finance Minister

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 ?? Picture / AP ?? G-20 officials are concerned about protection­ism over steel as US President Donald Trump said he would always defend the American worker. Inset: Donald Trump and German Chancellor Angela Merkel on the second day of the G-20 summit in Hamburg.
Picture / AP G-20 officials are concerned about protection­ism over steel as US President Donald Trump said he would always defend the American worker. Inset: Donald Trump and German Chancellor Angela Merkel on the second day of the G-20 summit in Hamburg.
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