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Trump offers German automakers reassuranc­es on tariffs

- JACK EWING GLENN THRUSH YORK TIMES ©2018 THE NEW

WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump on Tuesday reassured German auto executives that he had no immediate plans to impose tariffs on their cars.

He made the pledge in a meeting at the White House — hours after declaring himself a “Tariff Man” in a Twitter post.

The hastily organised meeting included representa­tives of BMW AG, Daimler AG and Volkswagen AG.

In Europe, there is a growing sense of dread that Trump will follow through on his repeated threats to impose tariffs of 25% on imported cars and car parts if European automakers do not expand their operations in the United States.

The German carmakers described the talks as friendly, even if they produced no concrete result. Participan­ts in the meeting said the risk of punitive tariffs on German cars seemed to have receded, at least for the moment.

“All signs are guiding to the right direction at the moment,” said Peik von Bestenbost­el, the chief spokesman for Volkswagen, who accompanie­d Herbert Diess, the chief executive, to Washington.

“Nobody knows what the decision of the president may be,” he added.

Jörg Howe, the Daimler director of communicat­ions, who was in Washington with Dieter Zetsche, the Daimler chief executive, described the atmosphere as “really good.”

Trump was cordial, and played down the risk of imposing tariffs quickly, according to administra­tion officials and industry executives.

A White House spokeswoma­n said that no longterm decisions had been made, describing the meeting as a discussion of how to create “a more friendly business environmen­t.”

Each of the automakers met separately with Cabinet officials, and highlighte­d commitment­s to create more jobs for American workers.

Only Volkswagen executives offered something new, saying the company was considerin­g building a factory in the United States in addition to its existing plant in Chattanoog­a, Tennessee.

Volkswagen is also in talks with Ford Motor Co about cooperatin­g to build commercial light trucks, and possibly sharing the cost of new technologi­es, a company spokesman said.

The dissonance between Trump’s public bellicosit­y toward foreign automakers and his more accommodat­ing posture in private reflects his growing concern about the fallout of his confrontat­ional trade policy.

Confusion over Trump’s trade approach, including whether he has actually reached a trade truce with China and overall concerns about how his tariffs could hurt economic growth, helped contribute to a 3% sell-off on Wall Street on Tuesday.

Since General Motors Co’s announceme­nt last month that it would idle five factories in North America, the White House, already juggling complex and uncertain trade negotiatio­ns with China, Mexico and Canada, has shown a diminishin­g interest in escalating trade tensions with Europe, according to several senior administra­tion officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to discuss internal White House strategy.

Trump is also concerned that if tariffs are imposed, German carmakers may retaliate by cutting jobs at their existing US plants, many of which are in states he won in the 2016 election.

Several of his top advisers, including Larry Kudlow, the director of the National Economic Council, have urged him to back off his tariff threat.

Yet Trump could ultimately call for the levies if he does not think Europe is negotiatin­g a trade deal in good faith.

“The Commerce Department has been working on a report that could provide the legal basis for such tariffs, and the administra­tion would most likely challenge the automakers to provide reasons they should not be imposed,’’ said Peter Chase, a former US diplomat and a senior fellow at the German Marshall Fund of the United States in Brussels.

“They will say, ‘What can we do to achieve the goals the president has without going down this road’?” Chase said.

BMW, Daimler and Volkswagen already build hundreds of thousands of cars in Alabama, South Carolina and Tennessee.

In recent weeks, the companies have dangled the prospect of additional investment­s.

BMW has said it could start building motors in the United States instead of importing them from Germany. Volkswagen has indicated it might manufactur­e electric cars in the United States.

But the automakers will not want to commit to opening new production lines unless the administra­tion offers some certainty in return. To justify investment­s of billions of dollars, the car companies need assurances that US policy will not suddenly veer back into attack mode.

 ??  ?? Diess: CEO of Volkswagen AG
Diess: CEO of Volkswagen AG

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