U.S. President Donald Trump agreed during a meeting with
European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker in July to
refrain from imposing tariffs on European cars while the two
sides said they would negotiate to cut other tariffs.
The interim deal has reduced the risk of a full-blown
transatlantic trade dispute, bringing relief especially for
German carmakers and lifting business morale in Europe's largest
economy in August.
A survey by the American Chamber of Commerce in Germany (AmCham)
showed, however, that company executives on both sides of the
Atlantic remain skeptical, with 71 percent doubting whether a
lasting agreement to cut tariffs can be reached.
More than 40 percent of German companies doing business in the
United States said the U.S. market had become less important for
them since the escalation of the trade dispute, the survey
showed.
This compared with 20 percent of U.S. companies doing business
in Germany who said the German market had become less important
for them.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Trump agreed during a
telephone call on Monday that they strongly supported ongoing
discussions between Washington and Brussels to remove barriers
to a deeper trading relationship, the White House has said.
Washington is pressing the EU to speed up the trade negotiations
launched after last month's meeting between Trump and Juncker,
German and U.S. officials told Reuters over the weekend.
(Reporting by Michael Nienaber,; Editing by Alison Williams)
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