Fortune | FORTUNE 10小时前
EU is racing to secure U.S. trade deal and preparing for the worst
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欧盟与美国正就贸易协议进行密集谈判,目标是在8月1日前达成一致,以避免美国总统特朗普对欧盟大部分出口商品加征30%的关税。尽管欧盟方面准备接受一份对美国有利的不平衡协议以打破僵局,但谈判尚未取得决定性进展。与此同时,欧盟也在积极准备应对无协议情景下的报复措施。美国正推动对欧盟商品实行近乎普遍的10%以上关税,仅保留少数豁免项目。双方也讨论了部分行业的潜在上限和钢铝配额,但最终协议仍需特朗普的批准。美国商务部长表示对达成协议有信心,认为开放市场对各国更有利。欧盟已准备好对美国征收的关税采取反制措施,包括已批准的对价值210亿欧元的美国商品加征关税,以及进一步的关税清单和非关税措施,甚至可能启用“反胁迫工具”。

🎯 **关键时间节点与潜在威胁:** 欧盟与美国正就贸易协议进行关键谈判,截止日期为8月1日,届时美国总统特朗普威胁将对欧盟大部分出口商品征收30%的关税,这给谈判带来了巨大的紧迫性。欧盟方面已准备好接受对美国有利的不平衡协议,以期在最后期限前达成任何协议。

⚖️ **美方关税立场与欧方考量:** 美国倾向于对欧盟商品实施近乎普遍的10%以上关税,仅保留航空、部分医疗设备、药品、烈酒和特定工业设备等少数豁免项目。欧盟则在寻求更广泛的豁免,并希望保护自身免受未来部门性关税的影响。尽管欧盟接受协议可能不对等,但会评估整体失衡程度。

🛡️ **欧盟的备战与反制措施:** 面对谈判僵局和潜在的关税威胁,欧盟正积极准备应对无协议情况。这包括制定报复性措施的计划,已批准对价值210亿欧元的美国商品加征关税,这些措施针对美国政治敏感地区,涉及大豆、农产品、家禽和摩托车等。此外,欧盟还准备了针对价值720亿欧元美国商品的关税清单,以及诸如出口管制和限制公共采购合同等非关税措施。

💡 **“反胁迫工具”的潜在启用:** 一部分欧盟成员国正推动激活其“反胁迫工具”(ACI),以应对美国可能实施的关税措施。该工具赋予欧盟广泛的报复权力,可能包括对美国科技巨头征收新税、限制美国在欧投资、限制市场准入或阻止美国企业竞标欧洲公共合同。该工具旨在作为威慑,并在必要时对旨在胁迫欧盟或其成员国主权政策选择的贸易措施作出反应。

European Union and US negotiators are heading into another week of intensive talks, as they seek to clinch a trade deal by Aug. 1, when US President Donald Trump has threatened to hit most EU exports with 30% tariffs.

Officials in Brussels are prepared to stomach an unbalanced agreement that favors the US if that’s what is required to break the impasse before the deadline. But the two sides have yet to yield a decisive breakthrough despite an earlier round of negotiations in Washington last week, according to people familiar with the matter. 

Because of that the EU is also stepping up preparations to retaliate in a scenario where there is no agreement. EU envoys are set to meet as early as this week to formulate a plan for measures to respond to a possible no-deal with Trump, whose tariff negotiating position is seen to have stiffened ahead of the deadline.

The US is now seen pushing for a near-universal tariff on EU goods higher than 10%, with increasingly fewer exemptions limited to aviation, some medical devices and generic medicines, several spirits, and a specific set of manufacturing equipment that the US needs, said the people, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss private deliberations.

A spokesperson for the European Commission, which handles trade matters for the bloc, said they had no comment to make on the ongoing negotiations.

The two sides have also discussed a potential ceiling for some sectors, as well as quotas for steel and aluminum and a way to ring-fence supply chains from sources that oversupply the metals, the people said. The people cautioned that even if an agreement were reached it would need Trump’s sign off – and his position isn’t clear.

“I am confident we’ll get a deal done,” US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said on CBS’s Face the Nation on Sunday. “I think all these key countries will figure out it is better to open their markets to the United States of America than to pay a significant tariff.”

Lutnick added that he had spoken to European trade negotiators early Sunday.

Trump’s Letter 

The US president wrote to the EU earlier in the month, warning that the bloc would face a 30% tariff on most of its exports from Aug. 1. Alongside a universal levy, Trump has hit cars and auto parts with a 25% levy, and steel and aluminum with double that. He’s also threatened to target pharmaceuticals and semiconductors with new duties as early as next month, and recently announced a 50% levy on copper. In all, the EU estimates that US duties already cover €380 billion ($442 billion), or about 70%, of its exports to the US.

Before Trump’s letter, the EU had been hopeful it was edging toward an initial framework that would allow detailed discussions to continue on the basis of a universal rate of 10% on many of the bloc’s exports.

The EU has been seeking wider exemptions than the US is offering, as well as looking to shield the bloc from future sectoral tariffs. While it’s long accepted that any agreement would be asymmetrical in favor of the US, the EU will assess the overall imbalance of any deal before deciding whether to pull the trigger on any re-balancing measures, Bloomberg previously reported. The level of pain that member states are prepared to accept varies, and some are open to higher tariff rates if enough exemptions are secured, the people said.

Any agreement would also address non-tariff barriers, cooperation on economic security matters, digital trade consultations, and strategic purchases.

Move Quickly

With the prospects of a positive outcome dimming and the deadline looming, the EU is expected to start preparing a plan to move quickly if it can’t reach a deal, said the people. Any decision to retaliate would likely need political sign-off from the bloc’s leaders because the stakes are so high, the people added.

Countermeasures of any substance would likely provoke an even wider transatlantic trade rift, given Trump’s warnings that retaliation against American interests will only invite tougher tactics from his administration. 

The bloc has already approved potential tariffs on €21 billion of US goods that could be quickly implemented in response to Trump’s metals levies. They target politically-sensitive American states and include products such as soybeans from Louisiana, home to House Speaker Mike Johnson, other agricultural products, poultry, and motorcycles.

The EU has also prepared a list of tariffs on an additional €72 billion of American products in response to Trump’s so-called reciprocal levies and automotive duties. They would target industrial goods, including Boeing Co. aircraft, US-made cars, and bourbon whiskey.

It’s also working on potential measures that go beyond tariffs, such as export controls and restrictions on public procurement contracts.

Anti-Coercion Tool 

Bloomberg reported last week that a growing number of EU member states want the bloc to activate its most powerful trade tool, the so-called anti-coercion instrument (ACI), against the US should the two sides fail to reach an acceptable agreement and Trump carries through with his tariff threats.

The ACI would give officials broad powers to take retaliatory action. Those measures could include new taxes on US tech giants, or targeted curbs on US investments in the EU. They could also involve limiting access to certain parts of the EU market or restricting US firms from bidding for public contracts in Europe.

The anti-coercion tool was designed primarily as a deterrent, and if needed, a way to respond to deliberate coercive actions from third countries that use trade measures as a means to pressure the sovereign policy choices of the 27-nation bloc or individual member states.

The commission can propose the use of the ACI, but it’s up to member states to determine whether there’s a coercion case and if it should be deployed. Throughout the process, the EU would seek to consult with the coercing party to find a resolution.

Member states were briefed on the status of trade talks with the US on Friday.

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欧美贸易谈判 关税 特朗普 欧盟 反制措施
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