The Denver Post

Trump tells Europe to watch out

- By Dmian Paletta and Josh Dawsey

President Donald Trump on Saturday threatened to hammer European automotive companies with steep tariffs as his global trade war snowballed into a third day.

Trump, in a series of Twitter posts while at his Mar-a-lago resort in Florida, appeared to be responding to warnings from European leaders that his promised tariffs on aluminum and steel would trigger retaliatio­n from numerous major U.S. trading partners.

Bring it on, Trump wrote.

“If the E.U. wants to further increase their already massive tariffs and barriers on U.S. companies doing business there, we will

simply apply a Tax on their Cars which freely pour into the U.S. They make it impossible for our cars (and more) to sell there. Big trade imbalance!” Trump tweeted Saturday.

The U.S. imposes a 2.5 percent tariff on the import of foreign cars and a 25 percent tariff on the import of foreign trucks and commercial vans. The European Union charges a 10 percent tariff on the import of cars.

On Thursday, Trump shocked the world — and many of his top advisers — with an off-the-cuff announceme­nt that the United States would impose a tariff of 25 percent on steel imports and 10 percent on aluminum imports. Canada’s leadership said they would retaliate with tariffs on U.S. exports. European Commission president Jean-claude Juncker said his bloc planned to hit back at the U.S. by imposing tariffs on targeting Kentucky bourbon, Harley-davidson motorcycle­s, and Levi’s blue jeans.

On Friday, Trump wrote in another Twitter post that “trade wars are good, and easy to win.” He also promised to enact what he called “RECIPROCAL TAXES” on any country that has a tariff against any U.S. good or service.

Trump’s message on Saturday continued to levy direct attacks at U.S. allies and some of the world’s largest economies. The tariffs on aluminum and steel and large tariffs on European automakers would have the biggest impact on Canada, the United Kingdom, Germany, South Korea, Turkey, and Japan, countries which the U.S. has extremely close national security ties.

During the 2016 campaign, Trump often said he planned to use the White House to focus squarely on what he viewed as trade imbalances caused by China and Mexico, but the moves he’s threatened in the past week would likely have little impact on them. China has dramatical­ly ramped up production of aluminum and steel in the past 20 years, leading to a glut of both metals that have hurt U.S. companies. But they don’t account for a large share of U.S. imports in these metals, making it more difficult for the White House to impose direct penalties. Instead, the largest exporters of steel to the U.S. are Canada, Germany, South Korea, and other top allies.

On Friday, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau called the tariff proposal “absolutely unacceptab­le,” using the same phrase as Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland, who also threatened retaliator­y measures if Canada isn’t exempted from the trade actions.

Trump’s new attack on European automakers is mostly a direct threat at Germany, which exported $23 billion in cars to the United States in 2016, according to data aggregated by the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology. But large German automakers also have a sizable presence in the United States, with BMW employing thousands of workers in South Carolina and Volkswagen employing thousands more in Tennessee. Those manufactur­ers produce hundreds of thousands of cars in the United States each year, many of which are later exported to buyers in Asia and Europe.

Trump often looks at trade relationsh­ips as a zero-sum game, complainin­g if the United States buys more goods and services from other countries than it sells to them. To that end, U.S. firms sold $53 billion in exports and imported $118 billion in goods from Germany last year, the kind of dynamic that he has often complained about.

But critics of Trump’s approach have often complained that tariffs and trade wars only drive up costs for domestic consumers, a move that would make German cars more expensive for U.S. consumers. Trump has also said these sorts of threats could incentiviz­e foreign companies to expand their U.S. operations so they don’t have to pay the import fees.

Trump has been hammering the German auto industry since before taking office, incensed at their move to expand production in Mexico and threatenin­g them with a 35 percent tariff on any cars brought into the United States.

One of Trump’s top advisers, Peter Navarro, also holds the view that German automakers have stolen marketshar­e in the U.S. by importing cars but limiting the amount of U.S. cars sold into their country, two people involved in White House deliberati­ons said. Navarro’s stature within the White House has grown in recent weeks as Trump has turned towards advisers with protection­ist views as he became frustrated that his trade agenda was flounderin­g.

German officials have spent much of the past year trying to convince U.S. policy makers that they have a healthy trade relationsh­ip in the U.S. that benefits both countries. But Trump has a frosty relationsh­ip with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

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