WTO approves US tariffs on USD 7.5 bn of EU goods in Airbus retaliation


PTI | Geneva | Updated: 02-10-2019 20:33 IST | Created: 02-10-2019 20:33 IST
WTO approves US tariffs on USD 7.5 bn of EU goods in Airbus retaliation
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Geneva, Oct 2 (AFP) The World Trade Organization on Wednesday gave Washington the greenlight to slap tariffs on USD 7.5 billion (6.8 billion euros) worth of EU goods in retaliation for the bloc's illegal support of Airbus. The ruling is the largest arbitration award in WTO history and a landmark moment the 15-year long Airbus-Boeing battle, which threatens to intensify already strained trade relations between the US and the European Union.

The EU immediately threatened to respond to any US move. "If the US decides to impose WTO authorised countermeasures, it will be pushing the EU into a situation where we will have no other option than do the same," Brussels said in a statement.

The case began in 2004, when Washington accused Britain, France, Germany and Spain of providing illegal subsidies and grants to support the production of a range of Airbus products. It has since been mired in the WTO's complex dispute settlement system, which allows for a range of appeals and other challenges.

But Wednesday's decision marks the first time the US has been cleared under international trade law to slap countermeasures on EU imports, and the tariffs could be in place by the end of the month. But Brussels will also soon get the chance to impose its own WTO-approved tariffs.

In a separate case launched in 2005, the EU alleged that Boeing had received USD 19.1 billion worth of prohibited subsidies from 1989 to 2006 from various branches of the US government. After earning a series of victories in that equally epic case, Brussels asked a WTO arbitrator to give it permissions to slap retaliatory tariffs on USD 12 billion in US goods.

The WTO is likely to decide on a lower number in a decision expected in about six months time. The Europeans in July made a proposal to call a truce in which both sides would admit fault and figure out ways to curtail airline subsidies. The EU and US have reached such settlements in the past.

EU Trade Commissioner Cecilia Malmstrom said this week that there had not yet been a positive response to that proposal, but that the bloc would continue to pursue a deal that avoided further tariffs and a deterioration in transatlantic trade. The Airbus-Boeing row is just one of several issues stoking transatlantic tensions that quickly descended into acrimony when US President Donald Trump took office in 2017.

Trump has embraced a protectionist agenda, slapping import duties on steel and aluminium from the EU and other allies, while also threatening tariffs on European cars. The US leader and European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker agreed in July 2018 to a cease-fire in the conflict and trade talks that have so far led nowhere. (AFP) SCY

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(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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