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‘Protection­ist’ Trump tariffs ‘offend’ Germany

Brussels has warned it could tax imports of American products such as orange juice or motorcycle­s in response to move

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FRANKFURT: US President Donald Trump is “offending” allies and risking a global trade war with his controvers­ial tariffs on steel and aluminum, Germany’s economy minister said Friday.

“This is protection­ism which offends close partners like the EU and Germany and which limits free trade,” Brigitte Zypries said in a statement.

“We will stand firmly by the side of our companies and their workers and will now work closely with the European Commission to answer coolly and clearly” Trump’s imposition of 10 percent tariffs on aluminum imports and 25 percent on steel, she added.

Thursday’s announceme­nt from the White House that it would slap levies on imports of the key metals was met with anger from major trading partners like China, Japan and the EU.

While the immediate financial impact of the border duties is small, observers fear they could spark an eye-for-an-eye spiral of countermea­sures, as other capitals feel forced to act to protect their own industries.

Brussels has warned it could tax imports of politicall­y sensitive American products such as orange juice or motorcycle­s in response to Trump’s tariffs.

But Trump said he would simply up levies on car imports from the EU in retaliatio­n — a potentiall­y painful blow for “car nation” and export champion Germany.

In calmer language than seen last weekend, EU Trade Commission­er Cecilia Malmstrom said Friday that “dialogue is always the prime option of the European Union,” adding that Brussels was “counting on being excluded” from the tariffs after Trump said close allies might be exempt.

But as he announced the tariffs Thursday, Trump declared that “many of the countries that treat us the worst on trade and the military are our allies.”

He singled out Germany for criticism, which books massive trade surpluses and has long failed to meet NATO defense spending targets.

“That’s not fair,” Trump said.

Germany’s exports to the US — its largest trading partner — outweighed imports by €50.5 billion ($62.2 billion) across 2017 and €3.5 billion in January this year, figures released by federal statistics authority Destatis showed Friday.

Strained relations between Washington and its traditiona­l EU allies have grown so bad that European Central Bank chief Mario Draghi issued a call for calm in a Thursday press conference.

“There is a certain worry or concern about the state of internatio­nal relations, because if you put tariffs against what are your allies, one wonders who the enemies are,” Draghi said.

“Disputes should be discussed and resolved in a multilater­al framework,” rather than tit-for-tat exchanges, he added.

News of the US tariffs came as other indicators for the German economy pointed to continuing strong growth into 2018 if it is spared major upsets.

“At least in the near term, prospects for German industry have never looked rosier,” economist Carsten Brzeski of ING Diba bank said after official data showed industrial production held steady in January.

Neverthele­ss, “the biggest risk for German exports seems to come from the US ... the risk for Germany is for real,” he added.

Some comfort from Berlin comes from the fact that destinatio­ns for its exports are “very diversifie­d” around Europe and further afield, Brzeski said.

German business groups offered a mixed response to Trump’s tariff assault, with the German Chambers of Commerce and Industry calling for a proportion­ate response from the EU.

By contrast, Holger Bingmann of exporters’ associatio­n BGA warned that “the EU may now take steps we wouldn’t want ... we call urgently for level-headedness.”

 ??  ?? EU trade commission­er Cecilia Malmstrom said on Friday that Brussels was ‘counting on being exluded’ from the tariffs amid growing trade tensions with the US. (AFP)
EU trade commission­er Cecilia Malmstrom said on Friday that Brussels was ‘counting on being exluded’ from the tariffs amid growing trade tensions with the US. (AFP)

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