House Republican introduces bill to grant
Trump more tariff power
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[January 25, 2019]
By David Lawder
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A Republican U.S.
representative on Thursday introduced White House-drafted legislation
that would give President Donald Trump more power to levy tariffs on
imported goods in an effort to pressure other countries to lower their
duties and other trade barriers.
The measure offered by Representative Sean Duffy, which has been touted
by Trump administration officials, has already been declared
unacceptable by some Republican senators, including Senate Finance
Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley.
Democrats, who control the House of Representatives and its legislative
agenda, are unlikely to grant Trump more executive authority, especially
as a standoff over the partial government shutdown drags on. A spokesman
for House Speaker Nancy Pelosi could not immediately be reached for
comment.
The Reciprocal Trade Act, which Trump was expected to highlight in his
now-delayed State of the Union address, would give him authority to levy
tariffs equal to those of a foreign country on a particular product if
that country's tariffs are determined to be significantly lower than
those charged by the United States.
It would also allow Trump to take into account non-tariff barriers when
determining such tariffs.
Trump has invoked trade laws passed in the 1960s and 1970s to levy
tariffs on steel and aluminum on national security grounds and has
applied tariffs on imports from China based on U.S. findings that
Beijing is misappropriating U.S. intellectual property through forced
technology transfers and other means.
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President Donald Trump speaks after competing measures to end the
partial U.S. government shutdown fell short in the Senate, in the
Cabinet Room of the White House in Washington, U.S., January 24,
2019. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
The United States has lower tariffs than many other countries, such
as its 2.5 percent levy on imported passenger vehicles compared with
the European Union's 10 percent tariff.
But increasing them and applying them in a country-specific manner
would effectively be a violation of the World Trade Organization's
most fundamental rule, that tariffs must be applied globally and
cannot be raised unilaterally except in anti-dumping and
anti-subsidy cases.
"The goal of the U.S. Reciprocal Trade Act is not to raise America’s
tariffs but rather to encourage the rest of the world to lower
theirs," Duffy said in a statement, adding that the authority would
be a negotiating tool to pressure other countries to lower their
tariffs.
(Reporting by David Lawder; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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