Zürcher Nachrichten - US eases Trump-era tariffs on Japanese steel

EUR -
AED 4.281859
AFN 80.112962
ALL 97.570145
AMD 447.274439
ANG 2.086359
AOA 1069.0019
ARS 1493.027557
AUD 1.785415
AWG 2.100699
AZN 1.985172
BAM 1.956748
BBD 2.35502
BDT 142.88595
BGN 1.956249
BHD 0.439368
BIF 3476.485666
BMD 1.16576
BND 1.498442
BOB 8.088154
BRL 6.507041
BSD 1.16638
BTN 101.022566
BWP 15.722132
BYN 3.81677
BYR 22848.889165
BZD 2.342764
CAD 1.599498
CDF 3367.880107
CHF 0.933395
CLF 0.028422
CLP 1114.967396
CNY 8.33983
CNH 8.365602
COP 4739.349232
CRC 589.134819
CUC 1.16576
CUP 30.892631
CVE 110.325062
CZK 24.59671
DJF 207.680996
DKK 7.462756
DOP 70.953759
DZD 151.598894
EGP 56.799193
ERN 17.486395
ETB 162.241475
FJD 2.623888
FKP 0.862642
GBP 0.868124
GEL 3.159486
GGP 0.862642
GHS 12.187753
GIP 0.862642
GMD 83.934819
GNF 10120.902195
GTQ 8.951568
GYD 244.005163
HKD 9.151073
HNL 30.542794
HRK 7.540114
HTG 152.58278
HUF 397.247178
IDR 19090.596626
ILS 3.910308
IMP 0.862642
INR 101.053995
IQD 1527.926965
IRR 49093.055682
ISK 142.176494
JEP 0.862642
JMD 187.10223
JOD 0.826493
JPY 172.605285
KES 150.698125
KGS 101.774235
KHR 4670.821641
KMF 487.882771
KPW 1049.183702
KRW 1614.938748
KWD 0.35586
KYD 0.971879
KZT 634.100901
LAK 25150.808924
LBP 104497.554498
LKR 352.100341
LRD 233.85023
LSL 20.819005
LTL 3.442185
LVL 0.705157
LYD 6.31706
MAD 10.535593
MDL 19.651664
MGA 5182.132186
MKD 61.589832
MMK 2447.602573
MNT 4182.456617
MOP 9.430361
MRU 46.353639
MUR 52.902101
MVR 17.943234
MWK 2022.288701
MXN 21.721087
MYR 4.932367
MZN 74.561945
NAD 20.819005
NGN 1783.087595
NIO 42.920789
NOK 11.862118
NPR 161.636505
NZD 1.948958
OMR 0.448268
PAB 1.166255
PEN 4.134038
PGK 4.907419
PHP 66.730418
PKR 330.318859
PLN 4.25909
PYG 8736.231511
QAR 4.252696
RON 5.069186
RSD 117.125069
RUB 93.273567
RWF 1686.472198
SAR 4.373214
SBD 9.65843
SCR 17.153637
SDG 700.036448
SEK 11.153498
SGD 1.49683
SHP 0.916104
SLE 26.754269
SLL 24445.401609
SOS 666.574262
SRD 42.74083
STD 24128.871122
STN 24.511767
SVC 10.205943
SYP 15156.975821
SZL 20.825301
THB 37.761275
TJS 11.108828
TMT 4.091816
TND 3.418526
TOP 2.730323
TRY 47.259109
TTD 7.931263
TWD 34.510001
TZS 2990.173338
UAH 48.782747
UGX 4180.989253
USD 1.16576
UYU 46.745449
UZS 14675.800818
VES 140.209876
VND 30542.902864
VUV 138.256254
WST 3.192998
XAF 656.212926
XAG 0.030559
XAU 0.000349
XCD 3.150524
XCG 2.101965
XDR 0.808349
XOF 656.314304
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.889503
ZAR 20.805825
ZMK 10493.231604
ZMW 27.348666
ZWL 375.374132
  • RIO

    -1.0900

    62.01

    -1.76%

  • CMSC

    0.0450

    22.53

    +0.2%

  • SCU

    0.0000

    12.72

    0%

  • BCC

    -0.9580

    87.182

    -1.1%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    13.13

    +0.3%

  • SCS

    0.0750

    10.655

    +0.7%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    22.92

    +0.13%

  • BCE

    -0.0350

    24.165

    -0.14%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    75

    0%

  • RELX

    -0.6300

    52.1

    -1.21%

  • BTI

    -0.5650

    51.685

    -1.09%

  • BP

    0.4150

    32.615

    +1.27%

  • NGG

    -0.8000

    71.35

    -1.12%

  • VOD

    -0.2700

    11.16

    -2.42%

  • AZN

    -0.6850

    71.975

    -0.95%

  • GSK

    -0.3200

    37.65

    -0.85%

  • RYCEF

    0.0500

    13.2

    +0.38%

Advertisement Image
US eases Trump-era tariffs on Japanese steel
US eases Trump-era tariffs on Japanese steel

US eases Trump-era tariffs on Japanese steel

The United States will ease tariffs on steel imported from Japan, officials announced Monday, in the latest move by President Joe Biden's administration to resolve trade disputes started under his predecessor Donald Trump.

Advertisement Image

Text size:

Beginning in April, Japan will be allowed to pay lower duties on exports of up to 1.25 million tons of steel per year to the United States, ending the 25 percent levies Trump imposed in June 2018 on metal imports from the country and others, citing national security concerns.

The dispute with Japan was one of a number Trump initiated during his time in office that Biden has worked to resolve, and follows an agreement Washington reached last year to end the metal tariffs on the European Union.

"I'm pleased to announce the deal we reached will strengthen America's steel industry and ensure its workforce stays competitive, while also providing more access to cheaper steel and addressing a major irritant between the United States and Japan, one of our most important allies," Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said in a statement.

US Trade Representative Katherine Tai said the deal would "protect a vital American industry, our workers and their families," as well as level the playing field against China.

"This agreement, combined with last year's resolution with the European Union, will help us combat China's anti-competitive, non-market trade actions in the steel sector, while helping us reach President Biden's ambitious global climate agenda," she said.

However, the deal does not resolve all the outstanding trade issues between the two countries.

Levies of 10 percent on Japan's aluminum exports will remain for now, while the new tariff system covers less than the 1.8 million tons of steel the United States imported from Japan in 2017, the last year before the levies were imposed, according to Commerce Department data.

- 'Melted and poured' -

The Alliance for American Manufacturing welcomed the agreement, particularly a provision ensuring imported steel must be "melted and poured" in Japan so that other nations don't transship their metals through the country.

"The arrangement announced between the United States and Japan today recognizes the value of steel production to America's economic and national security," the trade group's president Scott Paul said in a statement.

He added that the tariffs imposed under Trump brought "relief for America's vital steel industry," while Biden's move widened "the focus on global overcapacity, while maintaining appropriate tools to mitigate threats to our economic and national security."

Trump's Republican administration engaged in a number of trade spats with allies and adversaries alike, many of which were unresolved when Biden took office in January 2021.

Among those were the tariffs of 25 percent on steel and 10 percent on aluminum imported from several countries, including the European Union and Japan.

Japan and the United States are among the world's top steel producers, ranked behind China, the European Union and India, according to data from the World Steel Association.

At the time, critics rejected Trump's citing of national security grounds in his decision, while the levies poisoned relations with Brussels and other allies.

- Smoothing things over -

The Biden administration worked out an agreement to lift the EU metals tariffs last October, and this month announced a deal to resume trade in mussels, clams, oysters and scallops after a decade-long halt.

Last June, Britain and the United States agreed to suspend retaliatory tariffs levied during a 17-year dispute over state aid for European planemaker Airbus and US rival Boeing, and also opened talks last month to resolve their differences over the metals tariffs.

Myron Brilliant, head of international affairs for the US Chamber of Commerce, spoke positively of the Japan deal, but said Washington must do more.

"The US should drop the unfounded charge that metal imports from the UK, Korea, and other close allies represent a threat to our national security -- and drop the tariffs and quotas as well," he said in a statement.

W.O.Ludwig--NZN

Advertisement Image