The European Union flag stands contained in the atrium on the European Council constructing in Brussels, June 17, 2024.
Omar Havana/AP
cover caption
toggle caption
Omar Havana/AP
BRUSSELS — European commerce ministers are assembly in Brussels on Monday, following U.S. President Donald Trump’s shock announcement of 30% tariffs on the European Union.
The EU is America’s largest enterprise associate and the world’s largest buying and selling bloc. The U.S. determination can have repercussions for governments, firms and shoppers on either side of the Atlantic.
“We shouldn’t impose countermeasures at this stage, but we should prepare to be ready to use all the tools in the toolbox,” stated Denmark’s international minister, Lars Løkke Rasmussen, instructed reporters forward of the assembly. “So we want a deal, but there’s an old saying: ‘If you want peace, you have to prepare for war.'”
The tariffs, additionally imposed on Mexico, are set to start out on Aug. 1 and will make all the things from French cheese and Italian leather-based items to German electronics and Spanish prescribed drugs dearer within the U.S., and destabilize economies from Portugal to Norway.
In the meantime, Brussels determined to droop retaliatory tariffs on U.S. items scheduled to take impact Monday in hopes of reaching a commerce take care of the Trump administration by the top of the month.
The “countermeasures” by the EU, which negotiates commerce offers on behalf of its 27 member nations, can be delayed till Aug. 1.
Trump’s letter reveals “that we have until the first of August” to barter, European Fee President Ursula von der Leyen instructed reporters in Brussels on Sunday.
Maroš Šefčovič, the EU’s commerce consultant in its talks with the U.S., stated negotiations would proceed.
“I’m absolutely 100% sure that a negotiated solution is much better than the tension which we might have after the 1st of August,” he instructed reporters in Brussels on Monday.
“I cannot imagine walking away without genuine effort. Having said that, the current uncertainty caused by unjustified tariffs cannot persist indefinitely and therefore we must prepare for all outcomes, including, if necessary, well-considered proportionate countermeasures to restore the balance in our transit static relationship.”
The letters to the EU and Mexico come within the midst of an on-and-off Trump menace to impose tariffs on nations and proper an imbalance in commerce.
Trump imposed tariffs in April on dozens of nations, earlier than pausing them for 90 days to barter particular person offers. Because the three-month grace interval ended this week, he started sending tariff letters to leaders, however once more has pushed again the implementation day for what he says can be just some extra weeks.
If he strikes ahead with the tariffs, it might have ramifications for practically each facet of the worldwide economic system.
Within the wake of the brand new tariffs, European leaders largely closed ranks, calling for unity but in addition a gradual hand to not provoke additional acrimony.
Simply final week, Europe was cautiously optimistic.
Officers instructed reporters on Friday they weren’t anticipating a letter just like the one despatched Saturday and {that a} commerce deal was to be inked in “the coming days.” For months, the EU has broadcast that it has robust retaliatory measures prepared if talks fail.
Reeling from successive rebukes from Washington, Šefčovič stated Monday the EU is “doubling down on efforts to open new markets” and pointed to a brand new financial settlement with Indonesia as one.
The EU prime brass will go to Beijing fora summit later this month whereas courting different Pacific nations like South Korea, Japan, Vietnam, Singapore, the Philippines, and Indonesia, whose prime minister visited Brussels over the weekend to signal a brand new financial partnership with the EU. It additionally has mega-deals within the works with Mexico and a buying and selling bloc of South American nations referred to as Mercosur.
Whereas assembly with Indonesia’s president on Sunday, Von der Leyen stated that “when economic uncertainty meets geopolitical volatility, partners like us must come closer together.”