US, Canada to lift tariffs on steel, aluminum & more, stop litigation in WTO – joint statement
Washington and Ottawa have agreed to remove steel and aluminum tariffs as part of an agreement regulating the metal trade between the two neighbors, according to a joint statement.
The US will lift its 25 percent tariff on steel imports and 10 percent tariff on aluminum President Donald Trump imposed against Canada back in late May 2018 while Canada will, in turn, remove all retaliatory tariffs it levied against the American goods, the statement said, adding that all the tariffs will be gone in two days.
It’s official, per a joint Canada-US statement issued the Canadian government: the tariffs will be gone within 48 hours.
The countries have agreed that there can be tariffs imposed on *individual products* if there is a meaningful “surge” of imports of those products. pic.twitter.com/gWUYx7pICM
— Daniel Dale (@ddale8) May 17, 2019
The two nations also vowed to take measures to prevent the imports of steel and aluminum that is “unfairly subsidized” or “sold at dumped prices” as well as prevent the “transshipment of steel and aluminum” produced in third countries to one another. They also agreed to create a special monitoring mechanism to promptly detect import “surges.”
The agreement also allows each side to impose a 25 percent tariff on steel and 10 percent tariff on aluminum if it faces a surge in their import, which is “meaningfully beyond historic volumes.” However, such a measure can be taken only after consultations with the other side. The move would also give the affected party a right to retaliate – but only in the affected sector, the document said without specifying the details.
A similar deal was struck with Mexico, President Donald Trump said in a speech on Friday.
Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau called the tariffs the biggest obstacle to the ratification of the United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement (USMCA), which is expected to supersede the previous deal between the three nations known as the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). USMCA was signed back in November 2018 but has not yet been ratified.
Washington slapped Canada and Mexico, as well as the European Union, with tariffs after it failed to win concessions from its allies and trading partners in May 2018. At that time, Trump said that the US had been unfairly treated in trade with its neighboring and overseas partners.
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The move soured relations between the allies as Canada implemented retaliatory tariffs matching the values of the US’ ones dollar-for-dollar and covering almost 300 US goods, which aside from steel and aluminum included inflatable boats, yogurt, whiskies, candles, and sleeping bags.
The EU also struck back by imposing its own tariffs against the US on American goods worth $3.13 billion, including bourbon whiskey, motorcycles and orange juice that are still in place.
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