U.S. tariffs to cost Germans up to 20 billion euros this
year: report
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[July 21, 2018]
BERLIN (Reuters) - U.S.
President Donald Trump's tariffs will lead to a drop in prosperity in
Germany this year and are likely to cost Germans up to 20 billion euros
($23.44 billion), the head of German think-tank IMK said.
The United States imposed tariffs on EU steel and aluminum on June 1 and
Trump is threatening to extend them to EU cars and car parts.
"The policy of tariffs will cost Germans up to 20 billion euros in
additional income this year," Gustav Horn, director of the IMK, which is
close to the trade unions, told weekly magazine Der Spiegel.
"Without Trump's policies, the upturn would do better in terms of
exports," he added.
If firms had better export prospects, they would have reason to invest
more, he said. But that is not happening now and is resulting in income
and number of jobs being lower than possible, he added.
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President Donald Trump in Washington, U.S., July 20, 2018.
REUTERS/Leah Millis
If the trade conflict escalates further, exports and therefore investment would
tumble, Horn was cited as saying, adding: "That would be the classic case of an
economic downturn."
On Friday the head of the DIHK Chambers of Commerce said tariffs on imported
cars that the United States is considering would slash around 6 billion euros
($7.03 billion) off German economic output.
(Reporting by Michelle Martin; Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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