China Daily (Hong Kong)

Trump slaps tariffs on Argentina and Brazil

- By SCOTT REEVES in New York scottreeve­s@chinadaily­usa.com

US President Donald Trump said he would boost tariffs on aluminum and steel imports from Argentina and Brazil, a move that sent financial markets down and could undercut prior agreements with those nations.

“Brazil and Argentina have been presiding over a massive devaluatio­n of their currencies, which is not good for our farmers,” Trump tweeted on Monday. “Therefore, effective immediatel­y, I will restore the tariffs on all steel & aluminum that is shipped into the US from those countries.”

But the White House didn’t immediatel­y issue an order outlining the tariffs. The Trump administra­tion had previously granted waivers to both nations from global tariffs of 25 percent on steel and 10 percent on aluminum that it had imposed in 2018, citing national security.

Meanwhile, the US Trade Representa­tive’s Office, or USTR, announced on Monday that it may place punitive duties of up to 100 percent on $2.4 billion on imports of French Champagne, handbags, cheese and other products, after concluding that France’s new digital services tax would harm tech companies in the United States.

The USTR said its “Section 301” investigat­ion found that the tax was “inconsiste­nt with prevailing principles of internatio­nal tax policy, and is unusually burdensome for affected US companies”, including Google, Facebook, Apple and Amazon.

US Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer said the government was also considerin­g whether to open investigat­ions into the digital services taxes of Austria, Italy and Turkey.

News of the tariffs on Brazil and Argentina surprised some experts.

“The Trump administra­tion cannot reinstate or raise tariffs against these two countries because they did not exist in the first place,” Usha Haley, the W. Frank Barton Distinguis­hed Professor in Internatio­nal Business at Wichita State University, said in an email. “Both countries had operated under a quota system.

“The tariffs do hit Argentina’s and Brazil’s struggling economies very hard when they least expected it and leaves everyone guessing on motives, which is perhaps what President Trump wanted.”

In a statement to China Daily, the Brazil Steel Institute rejected Trump’s charges: “(We) stress that exchange in the country is free and there is no initiative by the government to artificial­ly devalue the real. (Trump’s) decision harms the American steelmakin­g industry, which needs the semi-finished products exported by Brazil to operate its plants.”

Continuing dispute

The apparent increase in trade tensions contrasts with Trump’s stated desire to reach a “phase one” trade agreement with China and his push for congressio­nal approval of a new trade pact with Canada and Mexico.

Trump’s action against the South American countries on Monday may be part of the continuing trade dispute between the US and China.

US soybean farmers have been hit hard by China’s tariffs, and Midwest agricultur­al states are key to Trump’s reelection prospects in 2020. In July, Trump announced a $16 billion aid package to help farmers hurt by the trade dispute.

In response, China looked elsewhere to buy soybeans. For the nine months ended in May, Brazil supplied 77 percent of China’s soybeans, up from 40 percent, the US Department of Agricultur­e said.

“So perhaps these tariffs were punitive on more than one front,” Haley said. “I am puzzled by the president’s overnight transforma­tion of quotas to tariffs. There may be some legal ramificati­ons — I am unsure it can be done legally.”

Trump charged that Argentina and Brazil have manipulate­d their currencies, but few analysts agree. To manipulate a currency, nations purchase US dollars to weaken their own money, artificial­ly lowering the cost of their goods sold internatio­nally. The US Treasury Department didn’t mention either nation in its recent currency report.

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