Baltimore Sun

Car tariffs drive European Union, U.S. meeting in D.C.

President to host Juncker as fears of trade war rev up

- By Raf Casert

BRUSSELS — One of the European Union’s main leaders will sit down with President Donald Trump on Wednesday hoping to convince him to hold off from raising tariffs on imported cars and avoid a trans-Atlantic trade war.

The visit to the White House by European Commission President JeanClaude Juncker comes on the heels of a continenta­l tour by Trump, in which he called the EU, a 28-country bloc including historic U.S. allies, his “foe.” Trump especially came down hard on Germany, the EU’s economic powerhouse.

Trump has already imposed tariffs on steel and aluminum imports from Europe, and the EU has responded in kind. But even that exchange of measures would pale in comparison with duties on cars — a huge industry that has long been the symbol of postwar wealth on both sides of the Atlantic, and especially in Germany.

Trump wants to reduce the U.S. trade deficit with the EUandisacc­using the bloc of not playing fair on trade. And when it comes to security, he says the Europeans are refusing to pay their share in NATOandins­tead live off the massive U.S. defense budget.

AsJuncker was flying over, Trump set the tone with a tweet: “Tariffs are the greatest!” he wrote. “Either a country which has treated the United States unfairly on Trade negotiates a fair deal, or it gets hit with Tariffs. It’s as simple as that.”

Germany has become increasing­ly fed up with such outbursts. European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, center, will meet with President Trump on Wednesday.

Germany’s foreign minister, Heiko Maas, told ARD television hours before Trump’s tweet that “we won’t let ourselves be threatened and just cave in because, if we do that once, I fear that we will have to deal with such behavior very often in the future.”

When Juncker walks into Trump’s office, the hope is that the mood will be different.

“This is an occasion to de-dramatize any potential tensions around trade and to engage in an open, constructi­ve dialogue,” said Juncker’s spokesman, Margaritis Schinas.

The stakes are high, as the car industry carries heft in terms of trade and jobs in both the EU and the United States. The European car federation says that the United States is the No. 1 destinatio­n for EU-built cars, amounting for almost 30 percent of the total EU export value. It accounts for a quarter of U.S. car imports.

If Trump imposes a 25 percent tariff on imports of cars, trucks and auto parts, it “risks dragging us all down to a game of tit-for-tat retaliatio­ns that ultimately leave consumers in the U.S. as well as in Europe worse off,” said professor Alexander Mattelaer of the Egmont Institute think tank.

The EUhasalrea­dy told its U.S. counterpar­ts it is preparing a list of countermea­sures if the car tariffs are imposed. EU passenger car exports to the U.S. amount to $44 billion a year, dwarfing the tariff on steel and aluminum, which resulted in EU countermea­sures of $3.2 billion.

Not only is the EU against the tariffs, but so are the U.S. car industry and many voices in Congress. Automakers, suppliers and dealers argue that the tariffs would drive up car prices for U.S. consumers and hurt auto companies by increasing the cost of imported components and invite retaliatio­n from U.S. trading partners.

On top of that, the EU also has a huge stake in the U.S. industry, where European companies produce almost 3 million cars a year, accounting for over a quarter of production in the United States. The biggest exporter of U.S.-madecars is a German company — BMW, through its plant in Spartanbur­g, S.C.

German producers and supplies employ more than 118,000 people at about 300 plants, and manufactur­e more than 800,000 vehicles per year in the U.S. — with more than half of the cars being exported, said the German Associatio­n of the Automotive Industry.

Tariffs on the industry could change all that.

“Open markets are of decisive significan­ce for our involvemen­t in the U.S,” said the German federation’s president, Bernard Mattes.

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NG HAN GUAN/EPA POOL

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