The Record (Troy, NY)

Trump tariffs drawing threats

- By Ken Thomas and Paul Wiseman

WASHINGTON » The Trump administra­tion delivered a gut punch to America’s closest allies Thursday, imposing tariffs on steel and aluminum from Europe, Mexico and Canada in a move that drew immediate vows of retaliatio­n.

Stock prices tumbled amid fears of a trade war, with the Dow Jones industrial average downmore than 250 points in late-afternoon trading.

The import duties threaten to drive up prices for American consumers and companies and are likely to heighten uncertaint­y for businesses and investors around the globe.

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said the tariffs — 25 percent on imported steel, 10 percent on aluminum — would take effect Friday.

President Donald Trump had originally imposed the tariffs in March, saying a reliance on imported metals threatened national security. But he exempted Canada, Mexico and the European Union to buy time for negotiatio­ns — a reprieve set to expire at midnight Thursday.

Other countries, including Japan, America’s closest ally in Asia, are already paying the tariffs.

The administra­tion’s actions drew fire from Europe, Canada and Mexico and promises to quickly retaliate against U.S. exports.

“This is protection­ism, pure and simple,” said Jean-Claude Juncker, president of the European Commission.

The EU earlier threatened to counterpun­ch by targeting U. S. products, including Kentucky bourbon, blue jeans and motorcycle­s. David O’Sullivan, the EU’s ambassador in Washington, said the retaliatio­n will probably be announced in late June.

Mexico complained that the tariffs will “distort internatio­nal trade” and said it will penalize U.S. imports including pork, apples, grapes, cheeses and flat steel.

In Canada, Prime Minister Jus----

tin Trudeau said: “These tariffs are totally unacceptab­le.” Canada announced plans to slap tariffs on $12.8 billion worth of U.S. products, ranging from steel to yogurt and toilet paper.

“Canada is a secure supplier of aluminum and steel to the U.S. defense industry, putting aluminum in American planes and steel in American tanks,” Trudeau said. “That Canada could be considered a national security threat to the United States is inconceiva­ble.”

Trump had campaigned for president on a promise to crack down on trading partners that he said exploited poorly negotiated trade agreements to run up big trade surpluses with the U.S.

The U. S. tariffs coincide with — and could complicate — the Trump administra­tion’s separate fight over Beijing’s strong-arm tactics to overtake U.S. technologi­cal supremacy. Ross is leaving Friday for Beijing for talks

aimed at preventing a trade war with China.

The world’s two biggest economies have threatened to impose tariffs on up to $200 billion worth of each other’s products.

The steel and aluminum tariffs could also complicate the administra­tion’s efforts to renegotiat­e the North American Free Trade Agreement with Canada and Mexico, a pact that Trump has condemned as a job-killing “disaster.”

Trump offered the two U.S. neighbors a permanent exemption from the steel and aluminum tariffs if they agreed to U.S. demands on NAFTA. But the NAFTAtalks stalled.

Ross said that there was “no longer a very precise date when they may be concluded,” and that as a result, Canada and Mexico were added to the list of countries hit with tariffs.

Likewise, the Trump trade team sought to use the tariff threat to pressure Europe into reducing barriers to U.S. products. But the two sides could not reach an agreement.

The import duties will give a boost to American makers of steel and aluminum by making foreign metals more expensive. But companies in the U.S. that use imported steel will face higher costs.

And the tariffs will allow domestic steel and aluminum producers to raise prices, squeezing companies — from automakers to can producers — that buy those metals.

“When we pay more for steel than anybody else in the world, it’s our members who lose business,” said Paul Nathanson, spokesman for Coalition of American Metal Manufactur­ers and Users, which represents steel- consuming companies.

Measured purely in dollars, the tariffs don’t amount to much in America’s $20 trillion economy. Speaking on CNBC on Thursday, Ross called the tariffs “blips on the radar screen.”

But Oliver Rakau, an economist with Oxford Economics, warned that the tariffs could cause economic damage because “the specter of an escalation is likely to weigh on business sentiment and may derail the investment recovery.”

The Trump administra­tion is turning to a little-used weapon in trade policy: Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962. It empowers the president to restrict imports and impose unlimited tariffs if the Commerce Department sees a threat to national security.

Europe, Japan and other U.S. trading partners are contesting the U.S. tariffs at the World Trade Organizati­on.

The WTO gives countries broad leeway to determine national security interests. But there was an unwritten agreement that WTO mem- ber countries would use the national-security justificat­ion sparingly to avoid abuses.

Now that Trump has broken the taboo, critics fear that other countries will impose sanctions.

Critics say the steel and aluminum tariffs would do little to address the real problem plaguing metals producers around the world: massive overproduc­tion by China that has flooded world aluminum and steel markets. Canada, a staunch U.S. ally, is the largest supplier of steel and aluminum to the United States.

“The administra­tion’s trade remedies should specifical­ly target structural aluminum overcapaci­ty in China, which is caused by rampant, illegal government subsidies,” said Heidi Brock, president of the Aluminum Associatio­n, which represents aluminum producers, fabricator­s, recyclers and suppliers.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire, left, welcomes U.S. Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross prior to their meeting at French Economy Ministry in Paris, France, Thursday. U.S. tariffs on European steel and aluminum imports are expected after Trump...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire, left, welcomes U.S. Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross prior to their meeting at French Economy Ministry in Paris, France, Thursday. U.S. tariffs on European steel and aluminum imports are expected after Trump...

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