Los Angeles Times

Trump, Macron reach tariff deal

French diplomat says Trump and Macron have agreed to respite over digital taxes this year amid trade wars.

- BLOOMBERG

The U.S. and French presidents agree to a truce in their dispute over digital taxes to avoid escalation.

President Trump and French President Emmanuel Macron agreed to a truce in their dispute over digital taxes that will mean neither France nor the U.S. will impose punitive tariffs this year, a French diplomat said.

“Great discussion with @realDonald­Trump on digital tax,” Macron said Monday in a tweet. “We will work together on a good agreement to avoid tariff escalation.”

The respite defuses for now transatlan­tic tensions that had been building between Washington and Brussels along another potential trade war front. Last week, Trump signed a ceasefire with China in Phase 1 of a broader deal aimed at balancing trade between the world’s two largest economies.

The European Union is an even bigger U.S. trading partner than China and supply chains between the two economies, particular­ly in automotive and financial services industries, are intertwine­d in ways that would make a tit-for-tat tariff dispute even more harmful to the world economy.

France and the U.S. will continue negotiatio­ns along with their European partners until the end of 2020 to agree a global framework that ensures tech companies pay an appropriat­e amount of tax, the French diplomat said.

Macron’s government still hopes to find a solution that fits within discussion­s at the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t’s work on the issue, the official added, asking not to be identified in line with French government rules.

The White House and the

U.S. Trade Representa­tive’s office didn’t immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

European finance ministers meeting in Brussels on Tuesday will discuss progress of the OECD talks. While the OECD is still working on its proposal for taxing tech companies around the world, France pushed ahead with its own levy last year that hit U.S. internet giants such as Google, Apple Inc. and Amazon.com Inc.

The U.S. objected, alleging on Dec. 2 that the French tax discrimina­tes against American technology companies, citing Section 301 of a 1974 American law that Trump has thus far reserved to justify tariffs against China.

That opened the door to the U.S.’s threat to hit $2.4 billion of French goods with tariffs in retaliatio­n.

Among the French products targeted with duties of as much as 100% were luxury items such as wine, cheese and makeup. One American wine merchant called it the biggest threat to the industry since Prohibitio­n a century ago.

For its part, the French government had warned that the EU would retaliate if the U.S. imposed additional tariffs.

The dispute was another headache for European trade officials scrambling to expand their policy arsenal as the U.S. takes aim at a rules-based system for global trade that Trump argues is outdated and tilted against America. It also coincided with a change in leadership at the European Commission, the EU’s executive arm.

EU Trade Commission­er Phil Hogan visited Washington last week for the first time in the job, partly to plead for talks rather than tariffs in disagreeme­nts such as the French digital tax. At stake, he said, was transatlan­tic trade in goods and services valued at more than $3 billion a day.

“Sounds like a fairly healthy relationsh­ip to me,” Hogan said Thursday in the U.S. capital. “So why put tariffs on these EU products to make them more expensive for your people?”

The truce follows weeks of discussion­s between Treasury Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin and French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire, who were scheduled to meet Wednesday in Davos, Switzerlan­d, the alpine resort town where government officials and business leaders gather during the winter to discuss whatever is ailing the global economy.

U.S. and EU trade relations started to sour in 2018 when the Trump administra­tion invoked national-security considerat­ions to impose tariffs on steel and aluminum from Europe.

As a U.S. military ally, the EU was infuriated and promptly retaliated with levies on iconic American brands such as Harley-Davidson Inc. motorcycle­s and Levi Strauss & Co. jeans.

A subsequent U.S. threat to wreak significan­tly more economic damage by targeting the European auto industry with duties on the same security grounds led to a hastily agreed truce and a pledge by both sides to work toward reducing industrial tariffs across the board.

Since then, the Trump administra­tion has refused to start the tariff-cutting negotiatio­ns unless Europe includes agricultur­e in them. Also, it imposed levies on EU products in retaliatio­n over government aid to Airbus SE that was deemed illegal by the World Trade Organizati­on, and disabled the WTO’s appellate body.

The EU, meanwhile, is pressing ahead with a plan for tariffs against the U.S. in a parallel WTO case over unlawful subsidies to Boeing Co.

Trump is scheduled to speak Tuesday in Davos at the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting.

 ?? Andrew Harnik Associated Press ?? FRENCH PRESIDENT Emmanuel Macron and President Trump, shown at the White House in April 2018, have agreed not to impose punitive tariffs this year.
Andrew Harnik Associated Press FRENCH PRESIDENT Emmanuel Macron and President Trump, shown at the White House in April 2018, have agreed not to impose punitive tariffs this year.

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