European Stock Markets
The European Union began a study on Monday on whether the import tariffs
imposed by U.S. President Donald Trump warranted action to prevent
predominantly Asian producers flooding Europe with steel.
Trump’s tariffs, of 25 percent on steel and 10 percent on
aluminum, came into force last Friday, although the European Union and
six other countries secured temporary exemptions.
The
EU is concerned about whether steel manufacturers subject to the U.S.
tariffs will divert their product to Europe, leading to a surge of
imports.
Its study, which may last up to nine months,
could lead the EU to impose its own quotas or tariffs on steel,
including stainless steel and pipes, to prevent harm to its own
industry.
The tariffs or quotas would have to apply to all countries,
meaning leading exporters China, India, Russia, South Korea and Turkey
would be hit. U.S. steel makes up less than 1 percent of EU steel
imports.
“The information currently available to the
European Commission... has revealed that imports of certain steel
products have recently increased sharply showing that there is
sufficient evidence that these trends in imports appear to call for
safeguards measures,” the European Commission said in a document
published in the EU official journal on Monday.
China’s
commerce ministry said it was willing to strengthen coordination with
the European Union to cope with chaos caused by the U.S metals tariffs,
adding that protective measures would only make the situation worse.
The
Commission said total imports of steel had increased to 29.3 million
tonnes in 2017 from 17.8 million tonnes in 2013, largely due to global
overcapacity and measures taken by third countries to limit dumping.
For some products, it said, the industry was in a fragile
condition and vulnerable to further increases in imports, which was
likely due to trade defense measures, including the recent imposition of
tariffs by the United States.
It has given interested parties 21 days to complete questionnaires or submit information to aid its inquiry.
The European Union itself has until May 1 to secure a permanent exemption from U.S. metals tariffs.
Europe
says it wants to avert a trade war but the Commission has proposed a
series of measures if the White House hits EU producers, including a
challenge at the World Trade Organization and import duties on U.S.
products such as orange juice, bourbon and Harley-Davidson Inc (HOG.N) motor-bikes.

No comments:
Post a Comment