Shropshire Star

Australia will not retaliate against ‘unjustified’ US tariffs

Prime minister Anthony Albanese said he would continue to pursue an Australian exemption.

By contributor Rod McGuirk, Associated Press
Published
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese (Dean Lewins/AAP Image/AP)

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said US tariffs on the country’s steel and aluminium were unjustified, but his government would not retaliate with its own tariffs.

US President Donald Trump said last month he was considering a tariff exemption for Australia, a free trade treaty partner that has traded with the United States at a deficit for decades.

A former Australian government secured an exemption with the previous Trump administration in 2018 based on arguments including that Australian steelmaker BlueScope employs thousands of workers in the US.

The 2018 exemption took several months to secure and Mr Albanese said he would continue to pursue an Australian exemption.

“It has been foreshadowed that no country regardless of its relationship with the United States has been granted an exemption. Such a decision by the Trump administration is entirely unjustified,” he said.

“Tariffs and escalating trade tensions are a form of economic self-harm and a recipe for slower growth and higher inflation. They are paid by the consumers. This is why Australia will not be imposing reciprocal tariffs on the United States.”

The US officially increased tariffs on all steel and aluminium imports to 25% on Wednesday.

The decision not to exempt Australia was announced days after a spat became public between Mr Trump and the former Australian prime minister who secured the 2018 exemption, Malcolm Turnbull.

Mr Trump described Mr Turnbull, who quit politics in 2018 after being overthrown as prime minister by his own government, as a weak and ineffective leader.

“Malcolm Turnbull, the former Prime Minister of Australia who was always leading that wonderful country from ‘behind’, never understood what was going on in China, nor did he have the capacity to do so,” Mr Trump wrote on social media.

President Donald Trump speaks at the Business Roundtable quarterly meeting in Washington
President Donald Trump speaks at the Business Roundtable quarterly meeting in Washington (Pool/AP)

“I always thought he was a weak and ineffective leader and, obviously, Australian’s (sic) agreed with me!!!”

He was responding to an interview Mr Turnbull gave this week to US media company Bloomberg in which the former Australian leader said Chinese President Xi Jinping would take advantage of the US president’s chaotic and erratic leadership.

“I think China will take advantage, massive advantage of Trump,” Mr Turnbull told Bloomberg.

“What my prediction will be is that President Xi will aim to be the exact opposite of Trump. Where Trump is chaotic, he will be consistent. Where Trump is rude and abusive, he’ll be respectful. Where Trump is erratic, he will be consistent.

“And what that will do is build trust with countries, and there’ll be many countries who will, you know, looking at China on the one hand and Trump on the other, will find China a more attractive partner.”

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