San Antonio Express-News

WTO calls foul on Trump-era tariffs on Spanish olives

- By Bryce Baschuk

The World Trade Organizati­on said the U.S. violated internatio­nal trade rules when it imposed antisubsid­y tariffs on European exports of Spanish olives.

The Geneva-based body issues its findings in the case dating back to 2019 on Friday.

The ruling may test President Joe Biden’s nascent trans-atlantic trade reboot, which has resulted in the suspension of about $22 billion in two-way tariffs stemming from Trump-era trade disputes over steel and aluminum, and aircraft subsidies to Airbus and Boeing.

That’s because the U.S. could veto the ruling by appeal, which would then tempt Brussels to respond with retaliator­y tariffs on U.S. exports before gaining WTO authorizat­ion to do so.

Exports of Spanish olives to the U.S. fell 60 percent after the tariffs were imposed — dropping from $67 million in 2017 to $27 million in 2019, according to EU data.

Spain is the world’s largest producer of the olives — used mainly as a topping for pizzas and salads —

exporting $500 million worth in 2020.

“The WTO has upheld our claims about anti-subsidy duties being unjustifie­d and in violation of WTO rules,” Valdis Dombrovski­s, the European Commission’s trade chief, said in a statement. “These duties severely hit Spanish olive producers, who saw their exports to the U.S. fall dramatical­ly as a result. We now expect the U.S.

to take the appropriat­e steps to implement the WTO ruling, so that exports of ripe olives from Spain to the US can resume under normal conditions.”

The office of the U.S. Trade Representa­tive didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

The olive dispute dates back to 2018 when the Trump administra­tion imposed a parallel set of antisubsid­y and anti-dumping duties on imports of Spanish table olives that the U.S. said received tradedisto­rting EU aid.

WTO panel agreed with the EU’S argument that the U.S. imposed illegal anti-subsidy duties but did not support Brussels’ argument that the U.S. anti-dumping tariffs violated internatio­nal trade rules, according to the panel report.

The levies are as high as 27 percent and the combined rates are up to 44 percent, depending on the Spanish exporter, according to final calculatio­ns by the U.S. Department of Commerce.

Earlier this year, the U.S. Court of Internatio­nal Trade said the Commerce Department failed to accurately determine its anti-subsidy rates on Spanish olive imports.

If the U.S. rolls back the tariffs it could benefit Spanish olive producers including Aceitunas Guadalquiv­ir SLU, Agro Sevilla Aceitunas S. Coop. And., Angel Camacho Alimentaci­on SL, and industry group Asociacion de Exportador­es e Industrial­es de Aceitunas de Mesa.

The dispute was initiated by the two largest American processors of ripe olives — Bell-carter Foods, LLC and the Musco Family Olive Co. — who said their businesses had been harmed by cheap, subsidized Spanish olives that were sold below fair market value.

A big question now is whether the U.S. decides to veto the WTO decision by lodging an appeal at any point over the next 60 days.

That’s because the U.S. previously paralyzed the WTO’S appellate body, a tactic that has rendered toothless the world’s foremost arbiter of trade.

The WTO appellate body has been dysfunctio­nal since December 2019, when the U.S. blocked the appointmen­t of new members of the seven-member panel.

As a result, all new appellate cases enter into a legal limbo because the committee lacks a quorum needed to issue a final judgment.

If the U.S. appeals the ruling, the EU could respond by imposing retaliator­y tariffs according to a new European trade defense tool that allows penalties against nations that undermine WTO rulings by appealing them into a legal void.

 ?? Angel Garcia / Bloomberg file photo ?? U.S. imports of olives from Cabra and other regions in Spain are down 60 percent since tariffs were imposed in 2019.
Angel Garcia / Bloomberg file photo U.S. imports of olives from Cabra and other regions in Spain are down 60 percent since tariffs were imposed in 2019.

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