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在线翻译:
szdaily -> World Economy -> 
US threatens sanctions against European products after WTO ruling
    2018-05-17  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

THE World Trade Organization (WTO) ruled Tuesday the European Union had maintained illegal support to Airbus, prompting the United States to threaten sanctions against European products in the first of two key aircraft subsidy decisions due this year.

The WTO report coincides with mounting trade tensions over U.S. aluminum and steel tariffs and the impact on European firms of Washington’s decision to exit the Iran nuclear pact.

It is also part of a two-way battle between the EU and the United States over aircraft subsidies that could spark tit-for-tat reprisals between the two trade superpowers.

The WTO’s appeals body said the EU had failed to remove subsidized government development loans for the world’s largest airliner, the A380, and Europe’s newest long-haul jet, the A350, causing losses for Boeing and U.S. aerospace workers.

But the Geneva watchdog dismissed U.S. claims that loans for Airbus’s most popular models, the A320 and A330, were also costing Boeing significant sales and in so doing narrowed the scope of one of the world’s longest and costliest trade spats.

U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer said the United States would slap countermeasures on European goods unless the EU stopped “harming U.S. interests”. WTO rules allow it to target any industry since all goods fall into one category.

“It is long past time for the EU to end these subsidies,” he said.

Boeing predicted such tariffs could reach billions of dollars a year starting as early as 2019.

The European Commission said the U.S. had lost most of its claims and that much of the aid faulted by the WTO in earlier rounds of the 14-year-old case had expired in 2011. It said it would comply swiftly on the rest.

The EU highlighted earlier wins in a parallel case against U.S. subsidies for Boeing, and Airbus said this could in turn spark EU sanctions against the United States once the timetable for that case reaches the same point later this year.

“Today’s report is really only half the story,” Airbus chief executive Tom Enders said.

Barring a settlement, both sides are expected to push for billions of dollars in sanctions annually, but the amounts will depend on arbitration, expected to take around a year. (SD-Agencies)

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