The World Trade Organisation has rejected the 2018 import taxes that then-President Donald Trump imposed on foreign steel and aluminum, saying they violated global trade rules. Trump's tariffs of 25% on foreign steel and 10% on aluminum outraged America's long-standing allies, including the European Union and Japan, because he relied on a little-used provision of U.S. trade law to declare their steel and aluminum a threat to U.S. national security.

China and other trading partners challenged the tariffs at the 164-nation WTO. In a ruling issued Friday, the WTO said it was "not persuaded'' that the United States faced "an emergency in international relations'' that would justify the tariffs. Friday's decision, however, will likely have little real-world impact. If the United States appeals the ruling, it will go nowhere.
That's because the WTO's Appellate Body hasn't functioned for three years, ever since the U.S. blocked the appointment of new judges to the panel. And the Biden administration already reached agreements with the EU, Japan and the United Kingdom to essentially drop the tariffs and replace them with import quotas under which the Trump taxes do not apply. In return, the trading partners dropped their own retaliatory tariffs agianst the United States.
Still, the Biden administration criticized Friday's WTO decision. "The United States strongly rejects the flawed interpretation and conclusions,'' said Adam Hodge, spokesman for the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative. "The United States has held the clear and unequivocal position, for over 70 years, that issues of national security cannot be reviewed in WTO dispute settlement.''
The WTO, he said, "has no authority to second-guess'' the national security decisions of member countries. Biden's trade team has attempted to find a balance between mending fences with U.S. allies angry over Trump's "America First" trade policies, and keeping tariffs that are popular with many U.S. steel and aluminum producers and their workers.
Christine McDaniel, a trade analyst with George Mason University's Mercatus Center, said the ruling against the Trump tariffs was not a surprise. "Everybody knew that it was clear protectionism,'' she said. "Technically speaking, countries are able to act in their own self-interest when it comes to national security.'' The WTO just didn't buy the U.S. reasoning, she said.
(PTI)
More From GoodReturns

Crash in Gold Rate in India by Rs 71,400 in Single Day; Will Gold Price Today Fall Below Rs 1.50 Lakh? Outlook

Gold & Silver Rates Today Live: MCX Gold Crashes By Rs 5,645, Silver Falls By Rs 16,540; 24K, 22K, 18K Gold

1:5 Split Soon? Vedanta Ltd To Consider 3rd Interim Dividend On March 23, Share Jumps; Record Date & Buy Call

Sleeper Vande Bharat Express New Routes Identified for Long Distance Travel

Gold & Silver Rates Today Live Updates: Will 24 Carat, 22 Carat, 18 Carat See Bullish Week Ahead?

Mega Gold Price Crash Alert! 24K Sinks Rs 1.36 Lakh/100 Gm In Week; Silver Sees Losses | March 23-27 Outlook

Gold & Silver Rates Today Live: MCX Gold Ends Above Rs 1.40 Lakh, Silver Up 1%; 24K, 22K, 18K Gold On March 24

Gold Rate Crashes Over Rs 1 Lakh in Single Day, Slips to Lowest Since January; Will Gold Price Today Decline?

Gold Price Crash May Fuel Jewellery Demand: Why Kalyan Jewellers Share Price Could Shine Despite 5% Dip

Fatal Crash In Gold Rates In India By Rs 1,03,200/100 Gm; Biggest Single-Day Fall In 24K, 22K, 18K Gold Prices

Gold Rates In India Crash By Rs 29,400 On March 21 After Spot Gold Hits Weakest Week; 24K, 22K, 18K Gold Price



Click it and Unblock the Notifications