Khaleej Times

Car exporters to meet amid US tariff threat

- Bryce Baschuk, Jonathan Stearns and Esteban Duarte

geneva/brussels/madrid — Major car-producing nations are due to meet without the US to discuss possibly coordinati­ng their response to President Donald Trump’s threat of tariffs.

Representa­tives of the European Union, Canada, Mexico, South Korea and Japan will convene in Geneva on July 31 to debate how to respond if the US imposes levies on car imports, as well as prospects for reforming the World Trade Organisati­on, according to three people familiar with the matter.

Two officials said participan­ts will explore the possibilit­y of an internatio­nal accord to cut tariffs on cars, although two other officials said this was not part of the formal agenda.

While European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker and Trump agreed last week to refrain from “unilateral actions” as the EU and the US negotiate a trade pact, a Commerce Department investigat­ion under an act that permits the imposition trade restrictio­ns if car imports are found to harm national security is still ongoing, keeping up the pressure on major exporting nations.

US probe

“We’ve been directed by the president to continue the investigat­ion, get our material together but not actually implement anything pending the outcome of the negotiatio­n,” US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said on July 26. “What we’ve agreed to is not to impose automotive tariffs while the negotiatio­ns are under way.”

The threat of tariffs on car imports and levies already imposed on other goods including steel have strained relations between the US and its closest allies. Trade protection­ism adds to a series of disputes, ranging from climate change to Middle East policy, which have upended the ties binding together developed nations since Trump’s election in office.

Though the US auto industry has roundly rejected the need for new tariffs, major car exporters fear Trump could still forge ahead with duties after the Commerce Department releases its report in late-August or September. In recent weeks, EU trade officials have mulled the

What we’ve agreed to is not to impose automotive tariffs while the negotiatio­ns are under way

possibilit­y of launching a sectoral negotiatio­n among the world’s major auto-producing nations in the hopes of deterring Trump from imposing auto tariffs.

‘Plurilater­al’ deals

Such “plurilater­al” accords are trade deals among a group of like-minded countries that are typically limited to certain sectors of goods or services. The WTO permits this type of negotiatio­n as long as the benefits are provided to all of its members.

Though such a plurilater­al accord could potentiall­y appease Trump’s concerns about high levies on American car exports, a formal debate on such a deal — with the potential to upend the entire car industry by cutting levies across the globe — would require a political mandate.

Participan­ts planning to attend the meeting include EU’s directorge­neral for Trade Jean-Luc Demarty, Mexico’s undersecre­tary of foreign trade Juan Carlos Baker, Canadian deputy minister of internatio­nal trade Timothy Sargent and Japanese senior deputy minister for foreign affairs Kazuyuki Yamazaki, according to the people familiar with the matter. —

Wilbur Ross, US Commerce Secretary

 ?? AFP ?? The threat of tariffs on cars and levies already imposed on other goods have strained relations between the US and its allies. —
AFP The threat of tariffs on cars and levies already imposed on other goods have strained relations between the US and its allies. —

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