Cyprus Today

US allies line up for tariffs exemptions

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FROM Japan and South Korea to Australia and Europe, officials lined up yesterday to seek exemptions from President Donald Trump’s tariffs on US steel and aluminium imports, while Chinese producers called on Beijing to retaliate in kind.

Tokyo and Brussels rejected any suggestion that their exports to the United States threatened its national security which was Mr Trump’s justificat­ion for imposing the tariffs despite warnings at home and abroad that they could provoke a global trade war.

Mr Trump signed an order for the 25 per cent tariffs on steel imports and 10 per cent for aluminium at the White House on Thursday to counter cheap imports, especially from China, which he described as “an assault on our country”.

However, he said “real friends” of the United States could win waivers from the measures, which come into force after 15 days. In the event he exempted Canada and Mexico, fellow members of the North American Free Trade Agreement (Nafta) which he is trying to renegotiat­e.

Brazil, which after Canada is the biggest steel supplier to the US market, said it wanted to join the list.

“We will work to exclude Brazil from this measure,” Acting Trade Minister Marcos Jorge said after meeting US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross. Argentina made a similar case.

Japan, the United States’ top economic and military ally in Asia, was next in line. Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga told a news conference that Japan’s steel and aluminum shipments posed no threat to US national security.

The European Union, the world’s biggest trade bloc, chimed in. “Europe is certainly not a threat to American internal security so we expect to be excluded,” European trade Commission­er Cecilia Malmstrom said in Brussels.

Ms Malmstrom told reporters the EU was ready to complain to the World Trade Organisati­on, and retaliate within 90 days. She will meet US Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer and Japanese Trade Minister Hiroshige Seko in Brussels today when she will ask whether the EU is to be included in the tariffs.

Other officials at the EU, by far the biggest trading partner of the United States by value, have warned it could take counter-measures including European tariffs on US oranges, tobacco and bourbon.

Some products under considerat­ion are largely produced in constituen­cies controlled by Mr Trump’s Republican Party. Brussels has reminded Mr Trump that tit-for-tat trade measures deepened the Great Depression in the 1930s and in the 2000s cost thousands of US jobs when Washington imposed tariffs on European steel.

 ??  ?? US President Donald Trump gives out pens he used to sign presidenti­al proclamati­ons placing tariffs on steel and aluminium imports
US President Donald Trump gives out pens he used to sign presidenti­al proclamati­ons placing tariffs on steel and aluminium imports

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