Posted on 04/01/2005 4:02:14 PM PST by nextthunder
EU to slap extra 15% duty on range of US goods
BRUSSELS: The European Union plans to slap an extra 15 percent import duty on a range of US goods over Washingtons failure to apply an international trade ruling against an anti-dumping law, the EU executive said on Thursday.
The duty would hit imports including paper, agricultural, textile and machinery products from May 1, and affect slightly less than $28 million in trade, the European Commission said.
The Commission took this latest step in the dispute over the Byrd Amendment in light of the continuing failure of the United States to bring its legislation in conformity with its international obligations, it said in a statement.
The level of EU retaliation would be revised annually to adjust to the level of damage caused to EU companies, it said. While the Commissions plan needed the formal approval of EU ministers, this was expected to be a formality, officials said, adding there were no plans to meet US officials before the additional duty came into force.
Neither was there a meeting planned between EU Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson and US Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick until recently US trade representative who is scheduled to be in Brussels early next week, they said.
In November, the World Trade Organisation gave approval to the EU, Japan and others to apply an initial $150 million in trade sanctions after Washington failed to conform with a WTO ruling to repeal a subsidy programme for US companies.
Known as the Byrd Amendment, the programme distributes funds raised by anti-dumping duties on imports to the companies that initially requested government anti-dumping protection.
More than $1 billion has been doled out to US ball bearing, steel, seafood, candle and other companies under the Byrd Amendment over the past four years. Canada is expected to announce similar measures against the United States, its top trading partner, later on Thursday.
Mostly textiles: Most of the products to be hit with the EUs extra duty relate to textiles trousers and overalls made of synthetic fibres, for example. The only agricultural item is sweetcorn.
Five areas of stationery are also targeted, while in the machinery sector the products listed are crane lorries, along with spectacle frames and mountings. reuters
>> i'm strictly a free enterpriser and a free trader. and i get appalled when people rely on their governments to put in arbitrary tariffs and restrictions, to protect them when they are fundamentally uncompetitive
Free trader? That is code words for socialist -- a socialist with the ultimate goal of everyone being economically equal (everyone but the elites, of course). The simple-minded cannot see that what you really support is a destruction of America's way of life to enrich a few. It is similar to the doctrine of providing all children "equal" education by dumbing-down the smart children (again, the only ones enriched are the elites). Free trade is Marxist doctrine, supported by the early 19th century "progressives" (liberals), opposed by early 19th century republicans (conservatives), and opposed by true conservatives today.
A dumb deal on our part. We agreed to allow the subsidies of Airbus a long time ago. At the time it was not deemed a threat and they did not perceive Airbus ever catching up to Boeing.
Microsoft, and American IT technology tells them to go pound sand?
Maybe instead of propping up the unsustainable they need a little tough love to quit using the US as a scapegoat for their own self created problems.
Cool we can do that too...
I am not sure why we are falling on our swords to start a trade war in order to salvage something stuck in by Byrd in the dark of the night.
Source? I followed the arguments quite closely back in 1993-96. I remember all the empty promises the FT's made. Do you? Or do you wish to down-play their promises?
We are producing almost twice as much now than we did in 1990 with fewer employees. This is the result of significant productivity gains.
Below is a table showing the amount of actual durable goods manufacturing in the US indexed so 2000 = 100. These are not final shipment numbers, but are the value added to the final shipments. Intermediate inputs are not included. I also show employment numbers which I indexed so 2000 = 100 so they can be directly compared to the value added index.
Durable Goods Employment and Value-Added Indices | ||
2000 = 100 | ||
Value Added Quantity Index | Full-Time Equivalent Employees | |
Durable goods | Durable goods | |
1977 | 36.8 | 106.9 |
1978 | 39.3 | 113.3 |
1979 | 40.0 | 117.7 |
1980 | 38.3 | 112.2 |
1981 | 39.6 | 111.6 |
1982 | 36.0 | 101.3 |
1983 | 38.0 | 98.6 |
1984 | 44.2 | 106.1 |
1985 | 45.2 | 105.7 |
1986 | 44.7 | 103.2 |
1987 | 48.6 | 102.6 |
1988 | 53.3 | 104.9 |
1989 | 53.4 | 104.9 |
1990 | 52.4 | 102.2 |
1991 | 50.6 | 97.2 |
1992 | 52.5 | 94.6 |
1993 | 54.7 | 94.1 |
1994 | 60.1 | 96.6 |
1995 | 65.3 | 98.6 |
1996 | 69.3 | 99.6 |
1997 | 76.3 | 101.5 |
1998 | 84.4 | 100.6 |
1999 | 89.6 | 99.9 |
2000 | 100.0 | 100.0 |
2001 | 94.0 | 95.1 |
2002 | 95.3 | 87.4 |
2003 | 101.1 | 82.7 |
Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis |
Why do we constantly read of our manufacturing industries laying off people and we hardly ever read of hirings?
Again, I refer to the above table. We are doing more with less.
Regarding the Dow - there was a 200 percent increase from 1994 - 1999 followed by a correction that bottomed out at 7,286 in 2002. Since then the Dow has risen over 40 percent. That's a 40 percent return in a little over two years.
Finally, real GDP growth was 1.9 percent in 2002, 3.0 percent in 2003, and 4.4 percent in 2004. Seems like a steady improvement to me.
Under your definition, someone who believes in a minimalist government, free trade, and actively is trying to get ahead of you economically is a socialist (and heavens alive a Marxist). I support free trade because it makes everyone better off and I would put it that the simple-minded cannot get their minds around this.
So Rudeboy...
I asked a few questions yet didn't get any answers. Care to answer them? Where is all that economic utopia that the FT's were droning on and on about? I see lots of huge trade growth figures, yet very little high paying jobs coming into the nation. Where is all the industrial jobs? Where is the enormous economic growth figures? And dont' give me the figures from the Clinton era which we now know were not legitimate.
Well would you care to explain this contradiction then? I mean the FT's promised utopia in trade and economics yet it has not appeared to have played out that way. Oil's closer to $60 a barrel and has plenty of upside left. This is because of a cartel. Isn't the whole idea of a cartel against free trade? If it is, why doesn't the US Govt. take OPEC to the WTO? Hmmmm??? Oil at $50 a barrel is not good for the economy yet there appears to be no free-trade mechanism at work to correct the power of the cartel. Sign me confused at trying to figure out all the promises that were made in the '90s. When will that uptopia they promised get here? Or is it here and no one knows it?The only time I've seen the term "utopia" used in any dialogue about economics is in discussions of Marxist theory, although I'm not sure if he or Engels actually used the term. Your insistence that your "opponents" on this thread (and others) respond to an argument that is a product of your own imagination, i.e., "where is the utopia I was promised?" is an almost textbook example of the strawman fallacy.
Oil is a commodity. Commodity prices rise and fall due to variations in supply and demand. The notion that prices can or will only go down as the result of any trade agreement is not only another strawman, but as a notion, is particularly puerile. The U.S. has not brought action against OPEC at the WTO because not all OPEC countries, including the one most capable of affecting oil prices--Saudi Arabia, are members of the WTO. I'll repeat: Saudi Arabia is not a member of the WTO. Your failure, until now, to grasp this simple fact makes me wonder what other fundamentals of global politics and economics you do not comprehend.
That'd be all of them.
U.S. Warns EU on China Arms Embargo
Sun Apr 3,12:10 PM ET Business - Reuters
By Patrick McLoughlin
RIGA (Reuters) - U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick said if the European Union ended a ban on selling arms to China it would affect its transatlantic defense trade with the United States.
EU leaders have repeatedly voiced support for lifting the embargo, which was imposed after the bloody crackdown on pro-democracy protesters in Tiananmen Square in 1989. But the European bloc wants to ensure its U.S. interests would not be hit by the move.
"It would certainly affect our transatlantic defense trade because the types of arrangements that we have had with defense firms in Europe would be upset," Zoellick said in Latvia during an official visit to the Baltic state.
Several countries, especially the United States and Britain, have been critical of the plan to lift the arms embargo, notably in the light of rising Chinese tensions with Taiwan.
Zoellick did not mention specifics but a number of British firms have bought U.S. companies, including BAE Systems. U.S. groups including General Dynamics and Lockheed Martin also have investments in the British defense sector.
"I think some of the opportunities and the integration that we have seen develop would be inhibited by this," Zoellick said.
Zoellick's remarks follow comments from French President Jacques Chirac quoted on China's official Xinhua news agency.
Chirac told President Hu Jintao by telephone the embargo was outdated and should be revoked, the agency said Friday.
Hu said the embargo had become increasingly inappropriate and that lifting it would help promote relations between China and the European Union, the report said.
German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder told a German newspaper last week that he was determined to relax the EU's arms embargo against China despite possible opposition from parliament.
"We think that a move to lift the arms embargo would be a mistake," Zoellick said. "For some of us, like myself coming out of the trade industry who have worked hard to create additional opportunities, this would not be a positive move."
Last month, Chirac said EU countries would not start selling weapons to China if they lifted the embargo and his support for lifting the ban was aimed at normalizing relations with China.
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