Business World

EU and Japan to sign massive trade deal as US puts up barriers

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THE EUROPEAN UNION’s (EU) top officials were set to arrive in Japan on Tuesday to sign the single market’s biggest trade deal ever and present a united front as Washington upends the internatio­nal trade order. EU Council President Donald Tusk and Commission head JeanClaude Juncker were to land in Japan after talks in Beijing, where they urged global trade cooperatio­n and warned against trade wars.

TOKYO — The European Union’s (EU) top officials arrive in Japan Tuesday to sign the single market’s biggest trade deal ever and present a united front as Washington upends the internatio­nal trade order.

EU Council President Donald Tusk and Commission head JeanClaude Juncker land in Japan after talks in Beijing, where they urged global trade cooperatio­n and warned against trade wars.

“It is the common duty of Europe and China, but also America and Russia, not to destroy ( the global trade order) but to improve it, not to start trade wars which turned into hot conflicts so often in our history,” Mr. Tusk said Monday in Beijing.

“There is still time to prevent conflict and chaos.”

The “landmark” EU-Japan deal creates a massive economic zone and stands in stark contrast to President Donald Trump’s “America First” protection­ism.

The deal, agreed last December, is “the biggest-ever negotiated by the European Union,” according to Commission spokesman Margaritis Schinas.

“This agreement will create an open trade zone covering nearly a third of the world’s GDP,” he said.

The EU — the world’s biggest single market with 28 countries and 500 million people — is trying to boost alliances in the face of Trump’s protection­ist administra­tion.

The EU-Japan deal will send a “strong signal to the world”

against US protection­ism, EU Trade Commission­er Cecilia Malmstrom said recently.

Mr. Trump’s administra­tion has angered traditiona­l allies like the EU and Japan by imposing trade tariffs, while rattling internatio­nal markets by threatenin­g a trade war with China.

On Sunday, the US president fueled rising rancor by labeling the EU, along with Russia and China, “a foe” of the US, and repeating his assertion that the EU has “really taken advantage of us on trade.”

The EU officials and Japan will also look to present a united front against US tariffs on steel and aluminum, which Tokyo has called “deplorable.”

Under the trade agreement, the EU will open its market to Japan’s auto industry, with Tokyo in return scrapping barriers

to EU farming products, especially dairy.

The EU is seeking access to one of the world’s richest markets, while Japan hopes to jump-start an economy that has struggled to find solid growth.

Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe had been scheduled to sign the deal in Brussels last week, but canceled his trip after devastatin­g floods that killed more than 220 people. —

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