
US-EU Trade Pact - Like Japan's - A Potemkin Illusion
Because, on paper, the 15% tariff that Europe accepted from the Trump 2.0 White House is lower than the feared 30% , Brussels is claiming victory.
After the pact was announced in Scotland, European Commission President Ursula Von der Leyen called the lower tariff a“huge deal.” Trump called it“a good deal for everybody” which is“going to bring us closer together.”
Both leaders are wrong, of course, as the confusion over the earlier deal with Japan demonstrates. There's a reason why, after months of theatrics, Team Trump is making deals left and right.
One, American households are realizing that they really do pay the consumption tax that Trump's tariffs amount to. Two, the US courts might soon rule that the tariff power rests with Congress, not a power-hungry president. Trump is making deals while he still can.
Yet in his haste, Trump's tariff arrangements are sowing confusion. In the case of Europe , it's an energy agreement that is more of a Potemkin Village than an enforceable deal. The US can't deliver what it's demanding Europe buy, while Europe doesn't have the capacity to accept what the US wants to ship.
Analyst Laura Page at the Kpler commodities firm speaks for many when she dismisses the US$750 billion of oil and gas Trump demands Europe buy in short order as“beyond wild” and“completely unrealistic.”
Turns out, the EU agrees. Since Sunday's deal was announced, the EU admitted it lacks the power to compel private companies to deliver on Trump's ginormous quotas.
“It is not something that the EU as a public authority can guarantee,” a senior EU official told reporters.“It is something which is based on the intentions of the private companies .”
All this sounds eerily family to officials in Tokyo. Since its July 22 tariff deal, Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's government has been struggling to discern (a) what it agreed to, (b) how to wiggle out of whatever interpretation with which Team Trump came away.
The idea that these negotiations are trade deals in the commonly accepted sense seems absurd to anyone who's seen a good mafia film or two, many economists agree. What Ishiba just agreed to is giving Trump a 15% taste of Japan's US business.
In return, Ishiba's economy gets, in theory, two kinds of protection. One is a continuation of US security arrangements. The other is no new extortion attempts from the Trump 2.0 crew. At least for now.

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