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US, EU near Deadline on $11.5B Jet Dispute Tariffs

BRUSSELS, June 11 (Reuters) - The United States and the European Union have yet to decide whether to continue ​suspending or to reimpose tariffs on $11.5 billion of ‌goods in a decades-long dispute over aircraft subsidies with just days to go before their truce expires.

The two sides in ​2004 lodged parallel cases at the World Trade ​Organization over subsidies for U.S. plane maker Boeing ⁠and European rival Airbus, accusing each other of ​unfair competition.

The WTO in 2019 authorised the United States ​to impose tariffs on $7.5 billion of EU goods, such as cheese, in the case against Airbus. A year later, it gave ​the EU the right to respond with countermeasures ​on $4 billion of U.S. imports, including tobacco and spirits. On June ‌15, ⁠2021, both sides agreed to suspend these tariffs for five years.

A European Commission spokesperson said on Thursday that discussions were ongoing to extend the suspension.

The two sides ​said in ​2021 they ⁠aimed to work on an overarching agreement on subsidies for large aircraft and to ​counter investments in aircraft by "non-market actors," meaning ​China. ⁠They said then they expected the dispute would be resolved within five years.

Instead, tariff tensions have risen, with ⁠the European ​Union facing fees on most ​of its exports to the United States, although aircraft and aircraft parts ​are excluded.

Reporting by Philip Blenkinsop; editing by Barbara Lewis

Source: Reuters


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