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Equipment manufacturers in North America and Europe pulling for beneficial trade discussion results

The United States has recently announced its plans to place tariffs on $7.5 / €6.8 billion of European Union goods, including certain types of construction machinery, following the WTO ruling on Airbus.
The United States has recently announced its plans to place tariffs on $7.5 / €6.8 billion of European Union goods, including certain types of construction machinery, following the WTO ruling on Airbus.

The free flow of trade and investment is the lifeblood of modern manufacturing. Equipment manufacturers in the United States and European Union depend on global supply chains to source parts and components, and access foreign markets to export their machinery. Today, 80 percent of world trade is driven by supply chains with trade in intermediate goods now nearly twice as large as trade in final goods. This is especially important in advanced manufacturing like construction equipment manufacturing. 

As both the United States and European Union are centers of technological development, transatlantic trade is helping create a strong path to sustained manufacturing competitiveness. However, recent government decisions are threatening to undermine continual economic growth and development.

The United States has recently announced its plans to place tariffs on $7.5 / €6.8 billion of European Union goods, including certain types of construction machinery, following the WTO ruling on Airbus. The EU may follow suit if the WTO Boeing case is decided against the U.S. Notoriously, the use of tariffs will inevitably lead to counter tariffs, lost markets for producers, higher consumer prices, shaky investor confidence and the potential to undermine long established transatlantic supply chains our workers and industry depend on. 

The United States and the European Union need to focus on removing barriers to trade while working together to counter unfair trade practices by third countries. Strengthening the rule of law and reforming the WTO to effectively respond to the challenges of global commerce in the 21st century is in the shared interests of the United States and the European Union.

With this joint statement, the European industry association of construction equipment manufacturers (CECE) and the American Association of Equipment Manufacturers (AEM) call on the European Union and the United States to work diligently together to defuse the tensions, abandon all plans by the United States of imposing these tariffs and avoid escalations leading to the imposition of additional tariffs by the European Union.

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6737 West Washington Street, Suite 2400
Milwaukee, WI
US, 53214-5647

Website:
aem.org

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