In a Jan. 12 speech to the National Foreign Trade Council, a business group that promotes free trade, President-elect Joe Biden's choice for U.S. trade representative said “U.S. trade policy must benefit regular Americans, communities and workers.” Katherine Tai added that it “starts with recognizing that people are not just consumers. They are also workers.”
After a phone call between Vietnam Trade Minister Tran Tuan Anh and U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer, the Ministry of Industry and Trade issued a statement Jan. 8 indicating that Lighthizer said it's false that he is planning to impose tariffs on Vietnam's exports over currency manipulation. Rather, Lighthizer said there has not been a final decision, the statement said. The VN Express International newspaper reported that Anh said the country's “monetary policy only serves to control inflation and ensure macro stability, not to create unfair trade advantages.” Anh also said that Vietnam is controlling the timber trade and usage, and is happy to cooperate with the U.S. in its investigations of timber trafficking.
In post-hearing comments over the argument that Vietnamese imports of illegal timber hurt U.S. furniture manufacturers, several parties said the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative is not following the law, because it provided no concrete evidence of illegal timber in furniture exporters' supply chains.
The Office of the U.S. Trade Representative is not taxing French cosmetics or handbags, as it wants to have “a coordinated response” to all the Digital Service Tax cases, the agency said Jan. 7. It also released its findings on India's, Turkey's and Italy's proposed DSTs, with no proposed actions.
The 22-person witness list for the Dec. 29 virtual Section 301 investigative hearing into allegations that Vietnam deliberately undervalued its currency to thwart U.S. economic growth is stacked heavily with people on record as opposing remedial tariffs on Vietnamese imports. Prehearing submissions in docket USTR-2020-0037 foretell some will also testify that the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative is singling out the wrong country for Section 301 currency manipulation review and is doing so for ulterior motives.
The deadline for comments to the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative had already passed on Vietnam currency manipulation when the Treasury Department released its finding that Vietnam is a currency manipulator, and 24 trade groups are asking for the comment period to be reopened and the Dec. 29 hearing to be delayed. The groups that signed the Dec. 18 letter to USTR include the American Apparel and Footwear Association, the Retail Industry Leaders Association and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. USTR did not immediately comment.
In an interview with the BBC, U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer said that finishing the U.S.-United Kingdom free trade deal should be palatable to the next administration, with its language around labor standards and climate change, but U.K. resistance on agriculture standards is one of the obstacles to getting it finished in the next month. “We're both leaders in the world on digital trade, on financial services. And I think we could do an awful lot to write the rules together, the best rules together,” he said, according to a story published Dec. 17. “There's a short period of time they're going to have to try to wrap this up. But I think it's something that can happen. It'll require compromise on both sides.”
Tomas Baert, head of trade and agriculture at the European delegation in Washington, said the European Union is looking for a “strong and united front with the United States” on trade as the region and the world recover from the fallout of the COVID-19 pandemic. Baert, who was speaking on a webinar Dec. 15 hosted by the European American Chamber of Commerce, said that while the Trump era was marked with “turbulence and tension” in trade, Europe feels like it escaped mostly unharmed, since there were not “massive tariffs” imposed on exported cars, trucks and auto parts, as was threatened.
President-elect Joe Biden announced Dec. 10 that he's selecting House Ways and Means Committee Chief Trade Counsel Katherine Tai to be the next U.S. trade representative, saying that her deep experience will allow the administration to “harness the power of our trading relationships to help the U.S. dig out of the COVID-induced economic crisis and pursue the President-elect’s vision of a pro-American worker trade strategy.”
U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer Dec. 9 announced that he'll be seeking consultations with Mary Ng, his Canadian counterpart, over the way that Canada allocated tariff rate quotas. Canadian processors are guaranteed a percentage of those import quotas, and the U.S. says that undermines American producers' access to Canada. “President [Donald] Trump successfully renegotiated the USMCA to replace the failed NAFTA, and a key improvement was to give U.S. dairy producers fairer access to Canada’s highly protected dairy market,” he said. “We are disappointed that Canada’s policies have made this first ever enforcement action under the USMCA necessary to ensure compliance with the agreement.”