The Manila Times

Tariffs and tech to tax G20 ministers

-

BUENOS AIRES: Tariffs, tech and taxes G20 countries at a meeting in Argentina next week overshadow­ed by the gathering clouds of a trade war.

The two- day meeting in Buenos Aires, which starts on Monday, comes at a particular­ly tense moment just two days before the United States is set to begin imposing tariffs on steel and aluminum imports.

US President Donald Trump has pledged to impose 25 percent duties on imported steel and 10 percent on aluminum. Only neighbors Canada and Mexico were exempted.

were reticent to tackle the subject of trade, considerin­g that it was not their area of competence,” a source close to the negotiatio­ns said.

“But the situation is such today that they will not be able to not speak about it. The question is how far we can go.”

Meanwhile, the US treasury wants to use the meeting to win consensus on how to combat China’s trade practices, particular­ly its cheap steel exports.

Except that Trump, far from being reserved when it comes to Beijing, also regularly attacks Europe.

“It’s a funny strategy which consists of targeting China by threatenin­g US allies,” said a European source.

The meeting in Buenos Aires, which also involve G20 central bank chiefs, will be a test of European cohesion ahead of a meeting next week steel and aluminum taxes.

“The important thing is that the European position is coordinate­d - istry said in the run- up to the talks, arguing that Europe “should be exempted” from US tariffs.

The G20 discussed the question of Chinese overcapaci­ty during its 2016 meeting and asked the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t ( OECD) to monitor efforts to curb supply, but to little avail.

The OECD, which often serves as the operationa­l arm of the G20, is struggling on another thorny issue— the taxation of the world’s tech giants, the so- called GAFA.

The acronym refers to the four behemoths of the digital industry: Google, Amazon, Facebook and Apple, whose tax optimizati­on practices are regularly a source of friction between the US and its allies.

The United States said Friday on big tech, and the Paris- based OECD warned there were “divergent views about how the issue should be approached.”

Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Spain— the EU’s five G20 European solution that can set an example for the rest of the world.

The European Union wants “big tech” to be taxed on overall revenue in the EU and not just on to a draft proposal obtained by Agence France- Presse.

In Buenos Aires, ministers and central bank chiefs will also discuss the question of imposing greater oversight on cryptocurr­encies.

- qué mentions the usual pledge on devaluatio­ns and exchange rates: “We will refrain from competitiv­e devaluatio­ns, and will not target our exchange rates for competitiv­e purposes.”

But the word protection­ism is conspicuou­s by its absence from the text, replaced by a warning to countries not to “retreat to inward looking policies.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines