From members of the European Parliament, criticizing the US agreement with a 15 percent duty to imports from the EU sound.
The European Parliament criticized the coordinated trade agreement with the United States. The ARD reported it on Monday, July 28th.
European Parliament Trade Committee Bernd Lange said he was not enthusiastic about the agreement with the United States, and the European Union had to make a very painful concession.
“15 percent tariffs – this means that the growth of previous tariff rates is four times, in return, the duties of importing American merchandise in the EU will be zero,” he said, called it in uneven conditions.
According to him, the EU is not the benefit of investing 600 billion euros in the United States, as it will not create jobs in the European Union and does not match interests in Europe.
Left leader in European Parliament Martin Shirdrevan, said the EU had made excessive concessions and agreed with cooperation, which would give us President Donald Trump to earn billions of billions of dollars, and the EU was at risk of thousands of jobs.
Anna Kawatszini, a green speaker in the European Parliament on trading issues, called the United States agreement “extremely uneven”, who separately noticed that the duties for steel and aluminum remain, and the EU has signed up for the obligations of importing American lng, which is the “green” of the “green”
Remember, on July 27, the United States and the EU entered into a trade agreement. The duty that the US imported for the EU would be 15% (as the EU duty for the United States), and not 30%, as if the agreement had not reached. The agreement does not cover pharmaceutical products. Iron and aluminum will still be taxed 50%
German Chancellor Friedrich Mertz said the trade agreement between the United States and EU has avoided increasing transatlantic relations.
News from CORRESPONDENT.NET On the telegram and whatsapp. Subscribe to our channels https://t.me/KorresPondentNet and WhatsApp
Source: korrespondent

I’m Liza Grey, an experienced news writer and author at the Buna Times. I specialize in writing about economic issues, with a focus on uncovering stories that have a positive impact on society. With over seven years of experience in the news industry, I am highly knowledgeable about current events and the ways in which they affect our daily lives.