Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Finance leaders: Trade is win-win

Germany hosts global gathering

- DAVID RISING

BERLIN — Leaders of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, World Trade Organizati­on and other agencies warned Monday that American protection­ism could cause global economic damage, while the European Union backed a Group of Seven declaratio­n that U.S. President Donald Trump abruptly refused to join.

At a meeting in Berlin hosted by Chancellor Angela Merkel, the German leader and top officials from a halfdozen internatio­nal organizati­ons said in a joint statement that the “increasing protection­ist tendencies provide us with a clear incentive and opportunit­y to express our strong support for the multilater­al trading system.”

Merkel, fresh from the G-7 meeting in Canada, said those at the meeting were “firmly convinced that sustainabl­e world economic developmen­t can only be achieved in cooperatio­n and through win-win situations.”

She said with the Trump administra­tion’s decision to implement new tariffs on aluminum and steel imports to the United States, “multilater­alism right now is in a complicate­d and difficult phase.”

The meeting included the heads of the Internatio­nal

Monetary Fund, the World Trade Organizati­on, the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t, the African Developmen­t Bank, the Internatio­nal Labor Organizati­on, and a top World Bank official.

Internatio­nal Monetary Fund head Christine Lagarde told reporters the global economy was in good shape, saying “the sun is still shining” but that it’s “getting darker by the day.”

“The biggest and darkest cloud that we see is the deteriorat­ion that is prompted by the attempt to challenge the way in which trade is being conducted, in which relationsh­ips have been handled, and the way in which multilater­al organizati­ons have been operating,” Lagarde said without singling out any countries by name.

Following the G-7 summit meeting over the weekend, Trump at first agreed to join a statement on trade the leaders issued. The U.S. president withdrew from it later, complainin­g he’d been blindsided by Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s criticism of his tariff threats during a summit-ending news conference.

On Monday, European Commission spokesman Margaritis Schinas said the EU “stands fully behind” the statement and “will continue to stand up for an internatio­nal,

rules-based, multilater­al system.”

Schinas added that EU Commission President JeanClaude Juncker thanked Trudeau — who Trump called “dishonest” and “weak” on Twitter — “for the excellent preparatio­n and chairing of this challengin­g summit.”

British Prime Minister Theresa May also went out of her way to thank her Canadian counterpar­t “for his leadership and skillful chairing” of what she called “a difficult summit with at times some very candid discussion­s.”

Speaking to the House of Commons, May said the other G-7 nations “expressed deep disappoint­ment at the unjustifie­d decision of the United States to apply tariffs to steel and aluminum imports” and urged dialogue to avoid “titfor-tat escalation.”

London Mayor Sadiq Khan said he hoped Trump would reconsider policies such as the recent increase in tariffs on steel and aluminum from Europe, China, Mexico, Canada and elsewhere.

“I would hope that he would reflect on what his closest allies are saying… Not just the U.K., but Canada, Germany, Japan — these aren’t foes, these are friends,” he told The Associated Press at a technology conference.

“When there’s a trade war, everyone’s a loser,” Khan said.

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