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EU opens new front in
trade war
2nd March 2004
The European Union (EU) has imposed
escalating tariffs on US companies that will cost American business hundreds of
millions of dollars. It is the first time that the EU has hit US firms with
sanctions as part of a trade dispute. The EU is imposing a 5% increase in duty
on a range of goods, from honey to roller skates to nuclear reactors.
The aim is to force the US
Congress to change a law that gives an unfair tax advantage to US exporters. The
EU sanctions will increase by a further 1% each month until they affect US
exports worth $666m (£356m, 533m euro) a year.
John Disharoon, of the American Chamber of Commerce, said that it was "a sad day
for trade relations between the US and Europe".
The trade row is just one of a growing number of disputes between the EU and the
US, the world's largest trading partners.
The US was forced to withdraw sanctions against EU and other steel producers
after the World Trade Organisation (WTO) ruled them illegal in the autumn.
However, the US is still pursuing a trade case against the EU at the WTO,
concerning Europe's reluctance to import GM foods and crops.
And trade is threatening to become an election issue, with both leading
Democratic candidates for president, claiming they will get tough over trade and
consider protectionist measures.
Tax breaks
The current dispute has been simmering for years.
In 2002, the WTO, which polices world trade, ruled a tax break given to American
exporters, such as Boeing and Microsoft, gives them an illegal unfair advantage.
The trade body authorised up to $4bn in punitive sanctions in compensation.
On Friday, EU trade commissioner Pascal Lamy visited Washington in a last-ditch
attempt to persuade American legislators to end the deadlock on revising the
corporate tax law.
"We have been extremely patient, but there is no way we can avoid these
sanctions which will hopefully concentrate minds on the urgency of passing
legislation," Mr Lamy said.
Steve Woolcock, a trade expert at the London School of Economics, said the
sanctions would initially have relatively little impact.
"I don't think the impact will be that great because the dollar is weak at the
moment, so an extra 5% on duties may not have that much effect to start off
with," he told the BBC's World Business Report.
The weak dollar has already hit European exporters hard by making their goods
more expensive in American markets.
With jobs an issue for US elected officials, there will be grassroots pressure
not to back down to an international body like the WTO or to what they will see
as European politicians.
And while the US adminstration has urged Congress repeatedly to change the tax
law, Congressional leaders are deadlocked over whether to offer additional
corporate tax breaks to US companies in compensation.
Last week, Treasury Secretary John Snow, Commerce Secretary Don Evans and Trade
Representative Robert Zoellick warned Congress that "the retaliatory tariffs on
American exports pose a threat to... growth and may retard the creation of jobs
in certain sectors of the economy".
Source:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/3521731.stm
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