UPDATE 1-U.S.-China trade war may cut global growth by half a point next year - Le Maire


Reuters | Washington DC | Updated: 09-10-2019 18:34 IST | Created: 09-10-2019 18:27 IST
UPDATE 1-U.S.-China trade war may cut global growth by half a point next year - Le Maire
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The trade war between the United States and China could cut global growth by 0.5 points next year, French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said on Wednesday.

Speaking to reporters on the sidelines of a meeting of euro zone finance ministers in Luxembourg, he urged a compromise on the separate trade conflict between Washington and the European Union, to avoid China profiting from it. He also called for a global deal on an overhaul of taxation of digital firms, after the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) unveiled proposals that he deemed "very good".

Back from a trip to China, Le Maire said Beijing's trade war with the United States could cut half a percentage point from global growth next year. "There may be an important slowdown next year because of this trade war," he told reporters.

"There should be around 0.5(%) growth level that would be diminished due to the trade war," he said. He urged a settlement of that dispute, and also called for a solution of the separate trade war between the United States and the EU, which could favour China. "We should avoid that," he said.

Le Maire's pleas for the settlement of trade wars will be echoed by the EU at a G20 meeting of finance ministers and central bankers next week in Washington, according to an EU document to be adopted on Thursday. In separate comments, Le Maire also praised proposals unveiled earlier on Wednesday by the OECD for a global overhaul of digital taxation.

"The key question now is to find a consensus and a compromise among all members of the OECD by the beginning of 2020," he said. France has for years been one of the main supporters of this reform. The European Union has repeatedly said that it will try to move alone with an EU-wide web tax if no deal is struck next year at the OECD, a global club of mostly rich countries.

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

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