U.S. eases way to more tariff exemptions under pressure
from allies
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[March 10, 2018]
By Lindsay Dunsmuir, Robin Emmott and Ruby Lian
WASHINGTON/BRUSSELS/
SHANGHAI (Reuters) -
The United States opened the way for more exemptions from its steel and
aluminum tariffs on Friday, after pressure from allies and intense
lobbying from lawmakers, further diluting the measures just a day after
they were formally announced.
President Donald Trump, who has broad powers to impose the tariffs of 25
percent on steel imports and 10 percent on aluminum, at the outset
granted exemptions to Canada and Mexico, and said there would be the
possibility of industry exemptions, although he has not been specific.
After Trump opened the door, Brazil, Japan, South Korea, Australia and
Europe clamored for special treatment, while Chinese producers called on
Beijing to retaliate in kind.
Trump tweeted on Friday that he spoke with Australian Prime Minister
Malcolm Turnbull about trade and military cooperation. "Working very
quickly on a security agreement so we don’t have to impose steel or
aluminum tariffs on our ally, the great nation of Australia!" Trump
said.
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin earlier said he expects countries in
addition to Mexico and Canada to be exempted in the next couple of
weeks.
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When proposed tariffs were initially announced, stock markets went into
a tail spin on concerns they would ignite a global trade war. But since
Trump signaled that exemptions were possible, reaction has been
measured, and counter threats have been carefully calibrated so far.
Those threats have been overblown, according to Dani Rodrik, professor
of international political economy at Harvard University’s John F.
Kennedy School of Government and one of the world's leading experts on
trade.
"The reality is that Trump’s trade measures to date amount to small
potatoes. In particular, they pale in comparison to the scale and scope
of the protectionist policies of President Ronald Reagan’s
administration in the 1980s," Rodrik wrote on Friday.
CHINA VOW
Tokyo and Brussels rejected any suggestion that their exports to the
United States threatened the country's national security - Trump's
justification for imposing the tariffs despite warnings at home and
abroad that they could provoke a global trade war.
"We are an ally, not a threat," European Commission Vice President Jyrki
Katainen said.
China's metals industry issued the country's most explicit threat yet in
the row, urging the government to retaliate by targeting U.S. coal - a
sector that is central to Trump's political base and his election pledge
to restore American industries and blue-collar jobs.
Brazil, which after Canada is the biggest steel supplier to the U.S.
market, said it wanted to join the exemption list, and Argentina made a
similar case.
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Japan, the United States' top economic and military ally in Asia, was
next in line. Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga told a news
conference that Japan's steel and aluminum shipments posed no threat to
U.S. national security.
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A worker operates a furnace at a steel plant in Hefei, Anhui
province August 18, 2013. REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo
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The European Union, the world's biggest trade bloc, chimed in. "Europe is
certainly not a threat to American internal security so we expect to be
excluded," European Trade Commissioner Cecilia Malmstrom said in Brussels.
Malmstrom told reporters the EU was ready to complain to the World Trade
Organization, and retaliate within 90 days. She will meet with U.S. Trade
Representative Robert Lighthizer and Japanese Trade Minister Hiroshige Seko in
Brussels on Saturday when she will ask whether the EU is to be included in the
tariffs.
Malmstrom won support from German Chancellor Angela Merkel. Shares in European
steel makers fell, although Germany's two biggest producers, Thyssenkrupp
<TKAG.DE> and Salzgitter <SZGG.DE>, have insisted the impact on them will be
limited.
The target of Trump's ire is China, whose capacity expansions have helped add to
global surpluses of steel. China is also the potential target of far more
wide-ranging U.S. action over what Washington says is its theft of intellectual
property and coercion of U.S. firms to share commercial secrets.
Beijing vowed to "firmly defend its legitimate rights and interests." Tariffs
would "seriously impact the normal order of international trade," the Commerce
Ministry said.
Last year, China imported 3.2 million tonnes of U.S. coal, worth about $420
million and nearly five times the amount it took in 2016. Trump has championed
coal exports as demand from power firms at home weakens.
The dispute has fueled concerns that soybeans, the United States' most valuable
export to China, might be caught up in the row after Beijing launched an inquiry
into imports of U.S. sorghum, a grain used in animal feed and liquor.
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South Korea, the third-largest steel exporter to the United States and a
strategic ally on the Korean peninsula, called for calm. "We should prevent a
trade war situation from excessive protectionism, in which the entire world
harms each other," Trade Minister Paik Un-gyu told a meeting with steelmakers.
While carrying a message to Washington to push forward a diplomatic breakthrough
over North Korea, South Korea's national security office chief Chung Eui-yong
asked U.S. officials to support Seoul's request for a waiver, a presidential
spokesman said.
(Additional reporting by Adam Jourdan, Wang Jing, Yuka Obayashi, Kaori Kaneko,
Ami Miyazaki, Ju-Min Park, Hyunjoo Jin, Cynthia Kim, Robert-Jan Bartunek, Eric
Beech and Alissa de Carbonnel; Writing by David Stamp and David Chance; Editing
by Toby Chopra, Susan Thomas and Leslie Adler)
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