UK TO DROP USA GOODS TARIFFS IN BID FOR TRADE DEAL
The UK will drop tariffs against the US over subsidies for aerospace firms, in a bid to reach a post-Brexit trade deal with Washington.
In November, the EU hit $4bn of US goods with duties of up to 25% in retaliation for illegal state aid given to planemaker Boeing.
They will be suspended in the UK from 1 January – when the current post-Brexit transition period ends.
International Trade Secretary Liz Truss said the UK wanted to find compromise.
“As an independent trading nation once again, we finally have the ability to shape these tariffs,” she said.
“Ultimately, we want to de-escalate the conflict and come to a negotiated settlement so we can deepen our trading relationship with the US and draw a line under all this,” she added.
- EU imposes tariffs on $4bn of US goods in Boeing row
- Boeing to cut 20% of workforce by end of 2021
The fight over aircraft subsidies to Boeing and European rival Airbus pre-dates outgoing US President Donald Trump’s time in office, but trade tensions between the two allies have become strained recently.
Donald Trump’s administration hit the European Union (EU) with tariffs on $7.5bn worth of goods in retaliation for state support given to Airbus. Products such as Scotch whisky were affected by the ongoing row.
However, the ADS Group, which represents the UK aerospace industry, said on Wednesday that it was “disappointed” the UK made the decision without “securing some reciprocal action to resolve this dispute”.
Airbus, which has a huge UK factory making aircraft wings, said that it still aims to “find a negotiated settlement of this long-standing dispute to avoid lose-lose tariffs”.
Major prize
But Scotch Whisky Association chief executive Karen Betts described the announcement on Tuesday as “an encouraging step”.
“It shows the UK government’s determination to de-escalate the damaging transatlantic trade disputes that have seen Scotch whisky exports to the US fall by over 30% in the past year,” she said.
“We now call on the US government to reciprocate by suspending the tariffs on UK goods stemming from the Airbus-Boeing dispute, so that industries in the UK and the US affected by this dispute can once again trade freely.”
Downing Street views a trade deal with the US as one of the major prizes on offer as a result of the UK’s exit from the EU.
But while the Trump administration said the UK would be “first in line” for a deal once it quit the bloc, President-elect Joe Biden has been cooler on the idea.
Steel protection
Earlier this year, he said any deal had to be “contingent” on respect for the Good Friday Agreement governing the Irish border.
And last week he said he would not enter any new trade agreement with a foreign power until the US has made “major investments here at home and in our workers and in education”.
On Tuesday the UK said it would maintain tariffs imposed by the EU after President Trump put duties on foreign steel and aluminium in 2018.
“We are protecting our steel industry against illegal and unfair tariffs – and will continue to do so – but are also showing the US we are serious about ending a dispute that benefits neither country,” Ms Truss said.
The EU said in November that it still hoped to settle the fight, and one trade official has said that President-elect Joe Biden’s win might help “reboot” talks.
Analysts have previously suggested that Mr Biden will, at least, shy away from escalating the tariffs and might remove existing ones – as well as those applied to imports of steel and aluminium.