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11 (ex) US Allies became enemies wtih US in trade war

Ang4MohTrump

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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/08/world/asia/us-trump-tpp-signed.html

U.S. Allies Sign Sweeping Trade Deal in Challenge to Trump
By ERNESTO LONDOÑO and MOTOKO RICHMARCH 8, 2018

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A container ship being loaded at a port in Tokyo in February 2016. Japan played a leadership role in keeping the coalition of 11 countries together in a revamped Trans-Pacific Partnership. Credit Franck Robichon/European Pressphoto Agency
SANTIAGO, Chile — A trade pact originally conceived by the United States to counter China’s growing economic might in Asia now has a new target: President Trump’s embrace of protectionism.

A group of 11 nations — including major United States allies like Japan, Canada and Australia — signed a broad trade deal on Thursday in Chile’s capital, Santiago, that challenges Mr. Trump’s view of trade as a zero-sum game filled with winners and losers.

Covering 500 million people on either side of the Pacific Ocean, the pact represents a new vision for global trade as the United States imposes steel and aluminum tariffs on even some of its closest friends.

Mr. Trump withdrew the United States from an earlier version of the agreement, then known as the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a year ago as one of his first acts in office. The resuscitated deal is undeniably weaker without the participation of the world’s biggest economy, but it serves as a powerful sign of how countries that have previously counted on American leadership are now forging ahead without it.

“Globally, there has been an increasing level of uncertainty, given the adoption of policies and measures by some key players that question the principles that have contributed to generating prosperity for our peoples,” President Michelle Bachelet of Chile said in a speech shortly before the pact was signed. “We need to stay on the course of globalization, yet learning from our past mistakes.”

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Trump is protectionist to his core. Beyond that he has a pathological need to try to strip Mr. Obama of every success. He could re-enter the...

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Here comes the responding salvo!

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"The U.S. is really delivering the region to China at the moment." Just about sums it up. Hopefully, those countries forced to align with...

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In its original incarnation as the TPP, the accord was conceived as a counterweight to China, whose vast economy was drawing other Asian countries closer despite its state-driven model and steep trade barriers. Not only does the pact lower trade barriers, it could also prod Beijing to make changes to enjoy the same benefits.

When President Obama was advocating the deal, he said that “America should call the shots” instead of China.

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President Trump officially withdrawing the United States from the Trans-Pacific Partnership in January 2017. Credit Doug Mills/The New York Times
Now, signatories are opening the door for China to join. Heraldo Muñoz, Chile’s foreign minister, told reporters on Thursday afternoon that Chinese officials had been weighing the possibility of signing on.

“This will be open to anyone who accepts its components,” Mr. Muñoz said. “It’s not an agreement against anyone. It’s in favor of open trade.”

On Thursday, Mr. Trump went in the opposite direction, announcing tariffs on steel and aluminum imports to the United States. He said that Canada and Mexico were being exempted for now, and that allies like Australia could later be excluded. His order could affect Brazil, China, Germany, Japan, South Korea and Turkey, though he said he would have leeway to add or take countries off the list as he sees fit.

The United States has “gone from being a leader to actually being the No. 1 antagonist and No. 1 source of fear” on trade, said Jeffrey Wilson, the head of research at Perth U.S.-Asia Center at the University of Western Australia. “If you’re a trade policy maker in Asia, your No. 1 fear is that Trump is going to take a swing at you.”

He added that such fears could prompt countries, however reluctantly, to tether themselves more closely to China. “The U.S. is really delivering the region to China at the moment,” Mr. Wilson said.

The new agreement — known as the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership — drops tariffs drastically and establishes sweeping new trade rules in markets that represent about a seventh of the world’s economy. It opens more markets to free trade in agricultural products and digital services around the region. While American beef faces 38.5 percent tariffs in Japan, for example, beef from Australia, New Zealand and Canada will not.

Once it goes into effect, the agreement is expected to generate an additional $147 billion in global income, according to an analysis by the Peterson Institute for International Economics. Its backers say it also bolsters protections for intellectual property and includes language that could prod members to improve labor conditions.

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Workers at a garment factory in Bac Giang Province near Hanoi, Vietnam, in October 2015. Vietnam is among the members of a new pact. Credit Kham/Reuters
Other members include Mexico, Vietnam, New Zealand, Chile, Malaysia, Peru, Singapore and Brunei. The deal will go into effect as soon as the legislative bodies of at least three signers ratify it. How long that will take is unclear.

China, which has discussed forming its own regional trade pact, has been more positive about the new deal since the United States pulled out. It sent a high-level delegation a year ago to Viña del Mar, Chile, where the pact’s members sought to regroup after the United States’ withdrawal. Experts said China could feel the pull if still more countries joined. The pact is also built around fostering trade in sophisticated manufactured goods and high-tech products, and China now produces many of those in abundance.

“It’s hard to ignore rules that everyone else is agreeing to, and they will probably look carefully at these rules,” said Wendy Cutler, a former United States trade negotiator who worked on the Trans-Pacific Partnership and is now managing director of the Washington office of the Asia Society Policy Institute.

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Wang Yi, China’s foreign minister, said on Thursday that the government hoped free-trade agreements in the region would play “a constructive role in their respective fields in resisting trade protectionism and building an open world economy.”

The new version of the TPP does not pack the same punch as the earlier iteration. With the United States, the agreement would have represented 40 percent of the world’s economy, giving its provisions added heft.

Still, the deal could appeal to companies trying to navigate the shifting trade waters.

“In a world that is so upside-down, especially for companies, companies will need to seek out growth and stability wherever they can,” said Deborah Elms, founder and executive director of the Asian Trade Center, a consulting firm in Singapore. “And that stability does not appear to be coming from the United States, where policy seems to shift at a moment’s notice.”

Japan, which has the largest economy among the remaining trade partners and played a leadership role in keeping the coalition of 11 countries together, is still holding out hopes that the United States might return to the pact, under either Mr. Trump or a subsequent administration.

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Chinese employees on Monday at a steel plant in Zouping, in eastern Shandong Province. The original pact was conceived as a counterweight to China. Credit Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
“We think the U.S. should come back, and we’ll say, ‘Please do come back,’ ” said Ichiro Fujisaki, a former Japanese ambassador to Washington. “It may sound a little impertinent, but the U.S. has taken many different positions on the economy or security.”

The Trump administration has recently signaled that it is open to re-entering the Trans-Pacific Partnership. In an interview at the World Economic Forum earlier this year, Mr. Trump said, “If we did a substantially better deal, I would be open to TPP.”

Steven Mnuchin, the United States Treasury secretary, said he had held discussions about the prospect of rekindling American membership in the pact, though at a congressional hearing in February, he said it was not a priority.

Yorizumi Watanabe, a professor of policy management at Keio University in Tokyo, said, “If the U.S. is retreating from this region, either as the pace setter or agenda setter of economic affairs or security affairs, this will be quite detrimental to the stability of this region.”

He added: “TPP as such should not be seen as a mere free-trade or economic agreement. This should be seen from a kind of geopolitical point of view.”

Heft could come from others. The Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington estimates that if five other places — Indonesia, South Korea, the Philippines, Taiwan and Thailand — joined the partnership, the annual increase to global income would total $449 billion by 2030, almost as much as it would have been if the United States were included.

In the deal signed on Thursday, only 22 of more than 600 original provisions have been suspended, relating to intellectual property protection and a grab bag of other issues, several of which had been pushed by the United States. Kazuyoshi Umemoto, Japan’s chief negotiator for the partnership, said that if the United States decided to re-enter the deal, those provisions could be reinstated.

“Trump won’t last forever,” said Patricio Navia, a political scientist at New York University. “Countries will return to a path toward globalization and this sends a beacon of hope.”

Ernesto Londoño reported from Santiago, and Motoko Rich from Tokyo. Reporting was contributed by Alan Rappeport from Washington, Keith Bradsher from Zibo, China, and Makiko Inoue from Tokyo.

A version of this article appears in print on March 9, 2018, on Page A10 of the New York edition with the headline: Allies Sign Sweeping Pacific Trade Accord in a Challenge to Trump. Order Reprints| Today's Paper|Subscribe

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Ang4MohTrump

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Xijinping should impose 50% Tariff on all US brands starting on McDonalds KFC Burger King Nike Reebok IBM Apple Compaq etc etc.
 

kangaroo.corpse

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Kangaroo wants boxing with Dotard

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https://www.wsj.com/articles/australia-disputes-u-s-tariffs-linked-to-new-security-pact-1520648823

Australia Disputes U.S. Tariffs Linked to New Security Pact
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull says the U.S. president’s security agreement reference is routine legal wording
im-3603

Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said that U.S. President Donald Trump’s reference to a security agreement in a tweet about tariffs on steel and aluminum imports was routine legal wording. Photo: Brendon Thorne/Bloomberg News
By
David Winning
March 9, 2018 9:27 p.m. ET
0 COMMENTS


SYDNEY—Australia on Saturday disputed U.S. President Donald Trump’s apparent assertion the day before that the country being exempted from planned U.S. tariffs on aluminum and steel imports would be conditional on a new security agreement.

On Twitter, Mr. Trump said Friday that his Australian counterpart “is committed to having a very fair and reciprocal military and trade relationship. Working very quickly on a security agreement so we don’t have to impose steel or aluminum tariffs on our ally, the great nation of Australia!”


A spokesman for Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said the phone call with Mr. Trump earlier that day focused solely on trade.

“There is no…nothing of that kind,” Mr. Turnbull said when asked about prospects of a new security agreement with the U.S. “The reference to the security agreement in his tweet is shorthand for the legal paperwork that has to follow through a proclamation in accordance with an executive order.”

Australia and the U.S. already have close defense ties, with thousands of U.S. marines rotating through the port of Darwin annually. Mr. Turnbull added that the “security alliance with the U.S. and it gets closer all the time.”

Australia said recently it stepped up naval movements in the South China Sea where China has been expanding its military presence by building bases on reefs. U.S. officials have pressed Australia to carry out so-called freedom of navigation patrols piercing a 12 nautical mile security zone claimed by China around artificial atolls in the area, but unrecognized under international law.

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However, a spokesman for Mr. Turnbull said Saturday that nothing had changed in Australia’s security relationship with the U.S. “We just have to complete paperwork to put the tariffs exemption in place,” he said.

In recent days, the U.S. has shown an increased willingness to offer concessions to U.S. defense allies after initially stating it would impose global tariffs of 25% on steel and 10% on aluminum. However, those offers have often been conditional on achieving other key strategic aims of the U.S.

The White House earlier said tariff exemptions on aluminum and steel provided to Canada and Mexico would be linked to progress in renegotiating the North American Free Trade Agreement.

Still, Mr. Turnbull hailed the U.S. decision as positive for jobs in both countries. “Australia/U.S. trade is fair and reciprocal and each of our nations has no closer ally,” he said on Twitter.


Australia, which exports about 500 million Australian dollars (about U.S.$392.3 million) in steel and aluminum to the U.S. each year, had in recent days grown alarmed that Mr. Trump may renege on a pledge to Mr. Turnbull in a meeting last July to exempt Australia from any tariff changes.

The meeting between the two leaders at a Group of 20 meeting in Hamburg was witnessed by U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross and White House economic adviser Gary Cohn, Australian officials said, as well as senior members of Mr. Turnbull’s cabinet. The U.S. declined to restate the pledge during a visit by Mr. Turnbull to the White House last month.

Write to David Winning at [email protected]
 

Ang4MohTrump

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Taiwan says Dotard Ang Moh Trump CB policies cause Taiwan harm and losses!

7 youtube videos pse click here to see:



https://tw.youcard.yahoo.com/cardstack/cc0d0890-2367-11e8-a37e-fd93a2621650/川普對進口鋼鐵課重稅 7張卡看懂為何帶衰台灣


川普對進口鋼鐵課重稅 7張卡看懂為何帶衰台灣
川普1日宣布,將開始針對鋼、鋁進口分別課以重稅,保護美國國內鋼鐵工業,抵制廉價進口商品,波及各國,限制進口會造成甚麼影響?

4
已新增至「我的收藏」
  • 實現貿易保護 減少不公平交易

    川普為實現貿易保護主義的承諾,實行許多保護政策。根據「232鋼鐵國安調查」,決定對鋼、鋁課徵高關稅,減少不公平交易對美國國安的危害。

  • 加墨豁免 各國可與美方商議

    川普8日正式簽署命令,限制鋼鐵進口將於15天後生效,而鄰國加拿大與墨西哥取得豁免。同時強調這是一份有彈性的文件,歡迎各國進行協商。

  • 限制鋼鐵進口 削弱中國的影響

    美國曾對中國進行反傾銷、反補貼調查,發現中國鋼材利潤高,認為中國具有經濟侵略性,限制鋼鐵進口希望能對抗規避反傾銷關稅的行為。

  • 鋼鐵進口總量排名 中國不在前十

    美國為全球最大鋼鐵進口國,國內鋼鐵商指控中國鋼鐵傷害本土產業,但中國僅佔美進口總量的5%,各界擔憂此舉反倒打擊其他重要盟國。

  • 中方歐盟不滿 可能採行報復措施

    中國對美方損害出口企業的權益、罔顧世貿組織規則表達不滿,未來也可能會提出制衡對策。歐盟也表示,不排除對美國代表性品牌採行報復性措施。

  • 台灣受波及 未來方向尚不明朗

    台灣去年於美國鋼鐵進口總量排名第8,美方對台採取11項徵收反傾銷稅的救濟措施。而目前限制鋼鐵進口尚未獲白宮、國會的支持,政策走向仍待觀察。

  • 依過去經驗 提高關稅恐傷害自身

    美國過去提高關稅的作法,效果不如預期,甚至會傷害自身經濟環境,對鋼鐵進口課關稅,也會使鋼材價格上漲,影響整體產業與物價,危害貿易穩定性。
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JohnTan

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Generous Asset
I hope our PM Lee is bravely leading the charge. We will force Trump to his knees and make him suck our dicks.
 
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