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Eakinomics:
Boeing-Airbus and Trade
Tom Lee has updated his research on
the long-running Boeing-Airbus dispute. The good news is that you
don’t actually have to go to the research. The update, in its entirety, is:
“On June 14, 2021, the United States and European Union (EU) agreed to
suspend tariffs from the Boeing-Airbus trade dispute for an additional five
years. The tariffs were initially suspended for a four-month period from
March 2021 to July 2021.
There it is. Now, what does one make of it? It could be that this is the
World Trade Organization equivalent of Ali-Frazier and both combatants have
just become too tired to fight. Or, it could be the leading edge of a
broader re-embrace of U.S.-Europe open trade. Unfortunately, if either of
those were the case, the tariffs would have been dropped entirely. The
decision to suspend for five years sends the message that both sides want
to retain the option of “playing tough” on the trade front.
The interesting question is how trade relations with Europe will figure in
policy toward China. The administration has made multilateral efforts the
central component of its China strategy, and selling the Europeans on the strategy
was the top priority of the president’s first overseas trip. When the
United States was in a similar position vis-à-vis the Soviet Union,
multilateral trade agreements (especially various rounds of the General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, or GATT) were a key part of cementing
together the western alliance.
Seemingly a long time ago the Obama Administration was negotiating the
Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership, an effort that fell victim
to the populist waves on both sides of the Atlantic. It will be interesting
to see if the effort is revived (under any name) under the cover of an
argument that confronting China is important enough to outweigh populist
fears on trade.
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