Arab News

EU promises tough line on US, China while pushing for free trade

Fair competitio­n is better than the law of the jungle: Macron

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BRUSSELS: German Chancellor Angela Merkel warned US President Donald Trump on Friday that Europe would react in kind if the US did not play fair in trade. The EU leaders also agreed to consider screening investment­s by stateowned Chinese firms.

They signed up to a document saying they and the European Commission should look into ways to increase reciprocit­y in government procuremen­t and investment.

“Reciprocit­y is the right way. If we have, for example, access to public contracts in the US, then we can say ‘yes’ to access to public contracts in Europe,” Merkel said, but if full access was denied then Europe would “need an answer.”

The leaders called on the commission to analyze foreign investment­s in strategic sectors, adding they would return to the issue at a future meeting.

The written conclusion­s to the EU summit that ended on Friday made no mention of the bloc’s two largest trading partners, the US or China but both were in the background of its “free and fair” trade push.

The 28-nation union tried for three years to forge a trade alliance with the US but now sees itself as an open markets counterwei­ght to a country whose president is looking at restrictin­g steel and aluminum imports.

Beijing is also in the sights of the “protection agenda” of new French President Emmanuel Macron, described as an embrace of free trade but with limits on foreign takeovers in areas such as energy, banking and technology, where China seeks Europe’s knowhow.

An EU-China summit earlier this month, designed to show the two as allies in climate change after the US withdrawal from the Paris accord, was overshadow­ed by disagreeme­nts over trade and overproduc­tion of steel.

“Fair competitio­n is better than the law of the jungle,” Macron told a news conference alongside German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

France, Germany and Italy have backed the idea of allowing the EU to block Chinese investment­s, partly because European companies are denied similar access in China.

More pro-trade countries such as Sweden have said this is a step down the path of protection­ism, while smaller eastern and southern European economies that are dependent on Chinese investment have rejected steps against Beijing.

New Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar said it made sense to screen foreign investment­s to ensure that public infrastruc­ture or defense firms did not to fall into foreign state-owned hands.

“The key thing we wanted to avoid was any effort to use this proposal as a Trojan horse for protection­ism,” he said.

Trade, agreed the EU leaders, created growth and jobs, encouragin­g progress in trade negotiatio­ns with countries in the Americas and Asia.

“I think that (at) a time when protection­ism is strongly on agendas, the EU’s commitment to a free and rule-based trading system is very important,” Merkel said.

The most advanced talks are with Japan, with the EU’s chief negotiator in Tokyo seeking a breakthrou­gh that would allow a provisiona­l deal to be signed in early July. The EU wants Japan to scrap tariffs on certain items, while Tokyo is seeking greater access for cars and car parts.

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