The National - News

TRUMP’S TRADE WAR COULD HURT US ECONOMY, IMF WARNS

Proposed tax on metal imports unlikely to have major impact on GCC producers, analysts say

- SARAH TOWNSEND, JENNIFER GNANA

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund said US President Donald Trump’s proposals to heavily tax steel and aluminium imports could damage the US economy, as fears of a trade war between the US and its key partners escalated with the European Union threatenin­g to impose retaliator­y tariffs.

Despite opposition from within his administra­tion, Mr Trump on Thursday announced tariffs of 25 per cent on steel and 10 per cent on aluminium imports.

“The import restrictio­ns announced by the US president are likely to cause damage not only outside the US, but also to the US economy itself, including to its manufactur­ing and constructi­on sectors, which are major users of aluminium and steel,” the IMF’s spokesman Gerry Rice said on Friday night.

“We are concerned the measures proposed by the US will, de facto, expand the circumstan­ces where countries use the national-security rationale to justify broad-based import restrictio­ns.”

Mr Trump warned of more trade actions in the form of “reciprocal taxes”, the term he has used for imposing levies on imports from countries that charge higher tariffs on US goods than what the US charges them.

“Trade wars are good and easy to win,” he tweeted on Friday. “We must protect our country and our workers. Our steel industry is in bad shape. If you don’t have steel, you don’t have a country!”

Mr Trump’s aggressive proposal has sparked global outrage and fears that key US trading partners such as China and Europe will retaliate.

EU officials said earlier they would respond “firmly” if Mr Trump presses ahead with his plan for steep tariffs on metals, potentiall­y by imposing 25 per cent tariffs on around $3.5 billion of imports from the US, Reuters reported.

“We will not sit idly while our industry is hit with unfair measures that put thousands of European jobs at risk,” European Commission head JeanClaude Juncker said.

“A trade war is in no one’s interests,” said the World Trade Organisati­on director general Roberto Azevedo on Friday, while Li Xinchuang, the vice chairman of the China Iron and Steel Associatio­n, called it “an extremely stupid move”.

The introducti­on of new tariffs by the US is a “misguided” move, Uday Patel, senior research manager – aluminium markets at research firm Wood Mackenzie told The National.

“What this action ultimately [would do] is hurt the US more than they realise, because automatica­lly it increases the price of aluminium, it’s going to be inflationa­ry,” he said.

“What you get is inflationa­ry pressures at a time when the US Federal Reserve is already thinking about increasing interest rates. This will impact growth.

“If you look at the number of smelters in the US that could start production because of higher prices of aluminium, you might create at a generous best 7,000 jobs, but you risk losing hundreds of thousands of jobs.”

Sellers of aluminium in the US could see their margins shrink by around 10 per cent, Mr Patel said.

“Trump has not said you could only import so much aluminium to the US, so [as a seller] if your landed cost – that is London Metal Exchange plus the US premium and transport costs – say they come to around $2,000, then add $200 in duties, it will simply mean 10 per cent less margin for the seller in the US.”

GCC producers have yet to respond publicly to Mr Trump’s proposals.

The region accounts for around 20 per cent of global aluminium production, with UAE government-owned Emirates Global Aluminium reporting record production levels of 2.1 million tonnes in 2017 and supplying to over 60 countries worldwide. Aluminium Bahrain, meanwhile, is working to build the world’s largest aluminium smelter by 2019.

EGA and Emirates Steel declined to comment on Mr Trump’s proposals when approached by The National.

Saudi Arabia Mining Company’s Maaden Aluminium signed preliminar­y agreements with its US joint venture partners Alcoa and Mosaic last May for a possible expansion of its aluminium production complex in Ras Al Khair Industrial City, a project that would raise primary aluminium capacity by 600,000 metric tonnes per year.

Oman’s Sohar Aluminium – a $2.4bn joint venture controlled by Oman Oil Company and Abu Dhabi National Energy Company, which each hold 40 percent, and Alcan, a unit of Anglo-Australian mining giant Rio Tinto, which owns 20 percent – has an annual production capacity of 375,000 tonnes. Any GCC impact of a US-imposed steel tariff would likely be small, because the Middle East does not export significan­t volumes of steel to the US, according to experts.

“[Steel] accounted for in the order of 0.9 per cent of total Middle Eastern exports last year, so the direct implicatio­ns for Middle Eastern producers would be relatively small,” said Valentina Burrai, senior research manager, steel and iron ore markets at Wood Mackenzie.

You might create at a generous best 7,000 jobs, but you risk losing hundreds of thousands UDAY PATEL Senior research manager, Wood Mackenzie

 ??  ?? An employee at German steel producer Salzgitter. The EU has responded angrily to US plans to tax metal imports Getty
An employee at German steel producer Salzgitter. The EU has responded angrily to US plans to tax metal imports Getty

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