U.S. President Trump stunned allies on Sunday by backing out of
a joint communique agreed by G7 leaders in Canada that had
mentioned the need for "free, fair, and mutually beneficial
trade" and the importance of fighting protectionism.
Trump, who has shocked allies by hitting them with tariffs on
steel and aluminum, also said he might double down by hitting
the auto industry, a particularly sensitive issue for Germany
whose car industry relies heavily on the U.S. market.
"It is important that the Europeans act decisively," German
Economy Minister Peter Altmaier told Deutschlandfunk public
radio. "At the moment it seems that no solution is in sight, at
least not in the short term."
"We are ready to discuss trade imbalances. We are ready to
consider factual arguments. But we believe this should happen
among friends and partners and not through reciprocal
confrontation," Altmaier said.
Altmaier said that the G7 leaders' summit had produced
"setbacks," adding that further tariffs by the Trump
administration would not only harm its allies but also the U.S.
economy.
Chancellor Angela Merkel on Sunday said Trump's backing out of
the G7 final communique via Twitter was "sobering and a bit
depressing." She promised an EU response to the steel and
aluminum tariffs in line with World Trade Organisation rules.
Merkel will on Monday hold talks with International Monetary
Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde, WTO Director-General
Roberto Azevedo, OECD Secretary-General Angel Gurria and World
Bank President Jim Yong Kim.
(Editing by Peter Graff)
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