What's new

EU plans subsidy war chest as industry faces ‘existential’ threat from US

beijingwalker

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Nov 4, 2011
Messages
65,195
Reaction score
-55
Country
China
Location
China

EU plans subsidy war chest as industry faces ‘existential’ threat from US​

European industry is on an emergency footing thanks to high gas prices and new lavish subsidies for American rivals.
BY JAKOB HANKE VELA AND BARBARA MOENS
NOVEMBER 22, 2022 11:02 PM CET

The EU is in emergency mode and is readying a big subsidy push to prevent European industry from being wiped out by American rivals, two senior EU officials told POLITICO.

Europe is facing a double hammer blow from the U.S. If it weren't enough that energy prices look set to remain permanently far higher than those in the U.S. thanks to Russia's war in Ukraine, U.S. President Joe Biden is also currently rolling out a $369 billion industrial subsidy scheme to support green industries under the Inflation Reduction Act.

EU officials fear that businesses will now face almost irresistible pressure to shift new investments to the U.S. rather than Europe. EU industry chief Thierry Breton is warning that Biden's new subsidy package poses an "existential challenge" to Europe's economy.

The European Commission and countries including France and Germany have realized they need to act quickly if they want to prevent the Continent from turning into an industrial wasteland. According to the two senior officials, the EU is now working on an emergency scheme to funnel money into key high-tech industries.

The tentative solution now being prepared in Brussels is to counter the U.S. subsidies with an EU fund of its own, the two senior officials said. This would be a "European Sovereignty Fund," which was already mentioned in the State of the Union address by Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in September, to help businesses invest in Europe and meet ambitious green standards.

Senior officials said the EU had to act extremely quickly as companies are already making decisions on where to build their future factories for everything from batteries and electric cars to wind turbines and microchips.

Another reason for Brussels to respond rapidly is to avoid individual EU countries going it alone in splashing out emergency cash, the officials warned. The chaotic response to the gas price crisis, where EU countries reacted with all sorts of national support measures that threatened to undermine the single market, is still a sore point in Brussels.

European Commissioner Breton especially has led the pack in sounding alarm bells. At a meeting with EU industry leaders Monday, Breton issued his warning on the "existential challenge" to Europe from the Inflation Reduction Act, according to people in the room. Breton said it was now a matter of utmost urgency to "revert the deindustrialization process taking place."

Breton was echoing calls from business leaders all over Europe warning about a perfect storm brewing for manufacturers. "It's a bit like drowning. It's happening quietly,” BusinessEurope President Fredrik Persson said.

The Inflation Reduction Act is a particular bugbear to EU carmaking nations — such as France and Germany — as it encourages consumers to "Buy American" when it comes to electric vehicles. Brussels and EU capitals see this as undermining global free trade, and Brussels wants to cut a deal in which its companies can enjoy the same American benefits.

With a diplomatic solution seeming unlikely and Brussels wanting to avoid an all-out trade war, a subsidy race now looks increasingly likely as a contentious Plan B.

To do that, it will be vital to secure support from Germany and from the more economically liberal commissioners such as trade chief Valdis Dombrovskis and competition chief Margrethe Vestager.

At a meeting of EU trade ministers on Friday, Brussels hopes to get more clarity from Berlin on whether they are willing to break their subsidy taboo.

France has long been calling for a counterstrike against Washington by funneling state funds into European industry to help industrial champions on the Continent. That idea is now also gaining traction in Berlin, which has traditionally been economically more liberal.

On Tuesday, German Economy Minister Robert Habeck and his French counterpart Bruno Le Maire issued a joint statement to call for an "EU industrial policy that enables our companies to thrive in the global competition especially through technological leadership," adding that "we want to coordinate closely a European approach to challenges such as the United States Inflation Reduction Act."

Apart from the trade ministers' meeting on Friday, the idea will also informally be discussed among competition ministers next week. One official said European leaders will also discuss it on the margins of the Western Balkan summit on December 6 and at the European Council mid-December.

 
Europe got played lol that’s what happens when you act like dumb little children
 
Europe has been fucked by the mericans (globalist zionists), destruction is imminent…..(includes uk)
 

EU countries say action needed against US subsidies but options are limited​

25/11/2022 - 12:23

European trade ministers are gathering in Brussels on Friday to discuss the "discriminatory" US Inflation Reduction Act but with just over a month to go before the legislation comes into force, there appears to be no concrete solution on the table yet.

The main issue for Europe is to ensure it doesn't enter into a trade war with the US which could splinter western unity in the face of Russia's illegal war on Ukraine.

"The Inflation Reduction Act as it stands now is quite worrisome, very worrisome, to be honest," Liesje Schreinemacher, the Dutch Minister for Foreign Trade and Development Cooperation, said upon her arrival at the Foreign Affairs Council.

"We have to take it step by step. I want to avoid a trade war by any means, because it hurts the US economy, it hurts the European economy. So no one benefits from any trade war."

Her Irish counterpart, Leo Varadkar, meanwhile said that the US legislation has "put a spanner in the works" in trade relations between the US and EU.

'Need for action'​

Washinton's $430 billion anti-inflation bill includes state aid to boost US manufacturing and incentives for consumers to buy American products including cars, batteries and renewable energies. It was signed into law in August and will come into force next year.

EU officials say that the bill risks unfairly discriminating against its own products and that it goes against international trade rules.

"There are $367 billion of US subsidies, of which $200 billion are actually not WTO (World Trade Organisation) compliant," Olivier Becht, French Minister for Foreign Trade and Attractiveness told reporters.

And with energy prices much higher in Europe than in the US as a result of the war in Ukraine, there is an added fear that many flagship European industries could relocate across the Atlantic to take advantage of local state aid and lower energy costs.

A joint EU-US Task Force to resolve the issue has been set up and two meetings have now taken place. A third is to be held soon. The bloc's position is that its manufacturers should be granted the same access to the US market as those from Mexico and Canada.

"I think the need for action will be pretty soon," Johan Forssell, Sweden's Minister for Foreign Trade and International Development Cooperation said.

"The Task Force has another couple of weeks to go, very forced time schedule here," he went on. "I think we cannot wait too long until we make a decision because I mean, the IRA, the decision has already been made in the US and this has started happening now."

Varadkar also said that Ireland hopes that a solution can be found at the negotiating table but also emphasised that "I think it's fair to say that absent that, there will have to be a response from the European Union"

"Nobody wants to get into a tit-for-tat or a subsidy race. But what the US has done really isn't consistent with the principles of free trade and fair competition," he added.

A Buy European Act?​

The options however are limited.

Taking the matter to the WTO is largely deemed a dead-end as efforts to reform the organisation have been stalled for years. The main issue is its dispute settlement system which the US has more-or-less abandoned, turning instead to a bilateral approach to resolve its issues with other countries.

"We also know that taking the dispute to the WTO if the Dispute Settlement Body is not changed, well that is also a risk," France's Becht noted.

The solutions he mentioned "could be either coercive or obviously support our own companies, here on European soil."

France has publicly supported a so-called "Buy European Act" to counter the Inflation Reduction Act and the large subsidies the Chinese state gives to its own companies.

President Emmanuel Macron is largely expected to address the topic with US President Joe Biden when he visits Washington next week.

 

Country Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom