BCN-03, 04 05 Trump, EU’s Juncker agree to ease trade tensions

285

ZCZC

BCN-03

US-EU-TRADE-AUTO

Trump, EU’s Juncker agree to ease trade tensions

WASHINGTON, July 26, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – US President Donald Trump and
European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker on Wednesday agreed on a plan
to defuse the festering trade dispute between the two major economies.

Germany’s economy minister described the agreement — which means
Washington will not follow through with a threat to impose tariffs on autos
that would hurt the dominant German car industry — as a “breakthrough” that
“can avoid trade war.”

The pair — who met for more than two hours of talks at the White House —
also said they would work to “resolve” the existing duties on steel and
aluminum imposed by Washington, which had angered key allies including the
European Union.

“We want to further strengthen this trade relationship to the benefit of
all American and European citizens,” Trump said in a statement delivered from
the White House Rose Garden.

“A breakthrough has been quickly made that nobody thought possible!” he
wrote on Twitter, later adding: “Great to be back on track with the European
Union. This was a big day for free and fair trade!”

The outcome seemed a victory for Trump, who had assured supporters that
his confrontational trade strategy would bear fruit, and who appears to have
conceded little in the talks with the EU.

The leaders agreed to “launch a new phase” in the relationship and “to
work together towards zero tariffs, zero non-tariff barriers, and zero
subsidies on non-auto industrial goods,” Trump said.

In addition, the EU has made a commitment to buy US soybeans and natural
gas.

Juncker, who had been somewhat defiant ahead of the meeting, said
afterwards: “I had the intention to make a deal today. And we made a deal
today.”

However, the deal was contingent “on the understanding that as long as we
are negotiating… we will hold off further tariffs, and we will reassess
existing tariffs on steel and aluminum.”

MORE/HR/0938

ZCZC

BCN-4

US-EU-TRADE-AUTO 2 WASHINGTON

While EU officials had threatened immediate retaliation to any auto
tariffs, and said they would not negotiate with Washington under duress, they
seem to have decided to appease the irascible US leader.

“Congrats to @JunckerEU, @realDonaldTrump: Breakthrough achieved that can
avoid trade war & save millions of jobs! Great for global economy!” German
Economy Minister Peter Altmaier said on Twitter after the talks.

– WTO reform –

Trump also won a commitment to work together to reform the World Trade
Organization to address some of his complaints about China on theft of US
technology, the behavior of state-owned enterprises, and overcapacity in
steel.

He has long complained that the WTO has been unfair to the United States,
despite the fact the US has won most of the disputes against China and
others.

The US and EU account for about $1 trillion in transatlantic trade, and
tensions spiked leading up to Wednesday’s high-stakes talks.

EU Trade Commissioner Cecilia Malmstrom, who accompanied Juncker, hailed
the agreement and said on Twitter that she “will be working hard to take this
work forward the coming months.”

The details and mechanisms as well as the timing remain to be worked out,
and the impact may not been seen for some time.

Juncker said the EU already imports 35 percent of its natural gas from US
producers, but will work to buy more.

“We are ready to invest in infrastructure and new terminals, which could
welcome imports of energy from the United States and elsewhere, but mainly
from the United States, if the conditions were right and prices competitive,”
he said in a speech after the White House meetings.

MORE/HR/0939

ZCZC

BCN-5

US-EU-TRADE-AUTO 3 LAST WASHINGTON
– Feeling the pain –

While the US president can claim his aggressive approach is working,
consumers, farmers and businesses are feeling the pain from the retaliatory
measures imposed to counter the raft of US tariffs on steel, aluminum, and
tens of billions of dollars in products from China put in place in recent
weeks.

Brussels retaliated against the metal tariffs, imposing punitive duties on
more than $3 billion of US goods, including blue jeans, bourbon and
motorcycles, as well as orange juice, rice and corn.

Canada, Mexico, and China — the main target of Trump’s trade offensive —
also hit back with steep duties on US goods, and have filed complaints
against Washington at the WTO.

While the US claims the retaliation was “illegal,” the Trump
administration has acknowledged it is doing damage to American farmers, and
announced Tuesday it will provide up to $12 billion in aid to farmers hurt by
trade tariffs.

WTO Director-General Roberto Azevedo said Wednesday he is hoping to “stop
this trend” of growing restrictions on trade.

A new WTO report showed global trade covered by measures to restrict
imports reached $84.5 billion in May as compared to $79 billion in October,
with 75 new actions imposed in that time period.

“We are heading in the wrong direction, and we seem to be speeding up.
Growth, jobs and recovery are at stake,” Azevedo warned.

BSS/AFP/HR/0940