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European Union Urges 'Cool Heads' in Global Trade Dispute

Jan Strupczewski
April 20, 2018 | 8:00 pm
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The European Union's Economic Affairs Commissioner Pierre Moscovici  appealed to world financial leaders on Thursday (19/04) to keep a cool head over world trade disputes.  (Reuters Photo/Francois Lenoir)
The European Union's Economic Affairs Commissioner Pierre Moscovici appealed to world financial leaders on Thursday (19/04) to keep a cool head over world trade disputes. (Reuters Photo/Francois Lenoir)

Washington. The European Union's economic affairs commissioner appealed to world financial leaders on Thursday (19/04) to keep a cool head over world trade disputes, noting protectionism posed the biggest risk to Europe's robust economic growth this year.

"The rhetoric and the announcements of recent months must be a concern for all of us for all of us who believe in the benefits of free trade, which of course must be subject to the proper rules and safeguards," Commissioner Pierre Moscovici said in a speech at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.

"The biggest risk we see is the rise of protectionism," he said, speaking before a G20 meeting of finance ministers and central bankers from the world's 20 biggest economies.

The United States last month imposed import duties on steel and aluminium, mainly against China. In retaliation Beijing slapped import tariffs on more than a hundred US products ranging from food to steel pipes.

Europe has so far secured a temporary exemption from the US steel and aluminium tariffs but is unhappy about being in the middle of a trade war between its biggest trading partners.

China's international trade representative held a series of meetings with the ambassadors from major European nations last week to ask them to stand together with Beijing against US protectionism.

US President Donald Trump has threatened to impose tariffs on $150 billion in Chinese imports to the US to punish China for what US government officials regard as its predatory industrial policies and abuse of US intellectual property. Beijing has vowed to retaliate.

Moscovici said more protectionist measures could disrupt global supply chains, lower productivity and distort economic growth as well as lead to further corrections in asset valuations and increase financial market volatility.

"The knock-on effects of all this could be to hurt those of our citizens we most need to protect," he said as key economic policymakers gather in Washington for the International Monetary Fund's annual spring meetings as well as G20 talks.

"I hope that these spring meetings will be a moment in which cool heads prevail – and in which dialogue replaces diatribe," Moscovici said.

Reuters

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