EU pauses tariff retaliation for 90 days to match Trump's move
Countries subject to the pause will face Trump's 10% baseline tariff.
PTI
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European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen (PTI)
BRUSSELS, 10 APRIL
The European Union's executive commission said
Thursday it will put retaliation measures on hold for 90 days to match
President Donald Trump's pause on his sweeping new tariffs on global trading
partners and leave room for a negotiated solution.
European Commission
President Ursula von der Leyen said that the commission, which handles trade
for the bloc's 27 member countries, “took note of the announcement by President
Trump.”
New
tariffs on 20.9 billion euros ($23 billion) of US goods will be put on hold for
90 days because “we want to give negotiations a chance,” she said in a
statement.
But she
warned: “If negotiations are not satisfactory, our countermeasures will kick
in.”
Trump
imposed a 20% levy on goods from the EU as part of his onslaught of tariffs of
10% and upward against global trading partners but said Wednesday he will pause
them for 90 days to give countries a chance to negotiate solutions to US trade
concerns.
Countries
subject to the pause will face Trump's 10% baseline tariff.
Before
Trump's announcement, EU member countries voted to approve a set of retaliatory
tariffs on $23 billion in goods in response to his 25% tariffs on imported
steel and aluminum that took effect in March. The EU, the largest trading
partner of the US, described them as “unjustified and damaging.”
The EU
tariffs were set to go into effect in stages, some on 15 April and others on 15
May and 1 Dec. The EU commission didn't immediately provide a list of the
goods.
Members
of the EU — the world's largest trading bloc — have said they prefer a
negotiated deal to resolve a trade war that damages the economies on both
sides. The bloc's top trade official has shuttled between Brussels and
Washington for weeks trying to head off a conflict.
The
targeted goods are a tiny fraction of the 1.6 trillion euros ($1.8 trillion) in
US-EU annual trade. Some 4.4 billion euros in goods and services crosses the
Atlantic each day in what the European Commission calls “the most important
commercial relationship in the world.”
The EU
has targeted smaller lists of goods in hopes of exerting political pressure and
avoiding economic damage from a wider escalation of tit-for-tat tariffs.
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