logo
US and Europe trade negotiators discuss tariffs in Paris

US and Europe trade negotiators discuss tariffs in Paris

The European Union's top trade negotiator, Maros Sefcovic, met on Wednesday with his American counterpart, US trade representative Jamieson Greer, on the sidelines of a meeting of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
'We're advancing in the right direction at pace,' Mr Sefcovic said at a news conference.
He said ongoing technical meetings between EU and US negotiators in Washington would be soon followed by a video conference between himself and Mr Greer to then 'assess the progress and charter the way forward'.
Brussels and Washington are unlikely to reach a substantive trade agreement in Paris. The issues dividing them are too difficult to resolve quickly.
US President Donald Trump regularly criticises America's persistent trade deficit with the European Union, which was a record 161 billion dollars (£119 billion)last year, according to the US Commerce Department.
Mr Trump blames the gap between what the US sells and what it buys from Europe on unfair trade practices and often singles out for criticism the EU's 10% tax on imported cars.
America's was 2.5% until Mr Trump raised it to 25% in April. The EU has argued its purchases of US services, especially in the technology sector, all but overcome the deficit.
After the Trump administration's surprise tariffs last week on steel rattled global markets and complicated the ongoing, wider tariff negotiations between Brussels and Washington, the EU on Monday said it is preparing 'countermeasures' against the US.
The EU has offered the US a 'zero for zero' deal in which both sides end tariffs on industrial goods, including cars. Mr Trump has rejected that idea, but EU officials say it is still on the table.
US trade representative Jamieson Greer (Mark Schiefelbein/AP)
The EU could buy more liquefied natural gas and defence items from the US, and lower duties on cars, but it is not likely to budge on calls to scrap the value added tax, which is akin to a sales tax, or open up the EU to American beef.
'We still have a few weeks to have this discussion and negotiation,' French trade minister Laurent Saint-Martin said in Paris on Wednesday ahead of the OECD meeting.
'If the discussion and negotiation do not succeed, Europe is capable of having countermeasures on American products and services as well.'
Greta Peisch, who was general counsel for the US trade representative in the Biden administration, said the zero-for-zero proposal could provide a way to make progress if the Trump administration 'is looking for a reason not to impose tariffs on the EU'.
But Ms Peisch, now a partner at the Wiley Rein law firm, added: 'How motivated is the US to come to a deal with the EU?'
Mr Trump, after all, has longstanding grievances and complaints about EU trade practices.
One target of his ire is the value-added tax.
Mr Trump and his advisers consider VATs unfair protectionism because they are levied on US products. But VATs are set at a national level, not by the EU, and apply to domestic and imported products alike, so they have not traditionally been considered a trade barrier.
There is little chance governments will overhaul their tax systems to appease Mr Trump.
Likewise, the Europeans are likely to balk at US demands to scrap food and safety regulations that Washington views as trade barriers. These include bans on hormone-raised beef, chlorinated chicken and genetically modified foods.
'When you start talking about chickens or GMOs or automobile safety standards, you're talking about the ways countries choose to regulate their economies,' Ms Peisch said.
'We think that's protectionist. They think it's keeping their citizens healthy … It's been a sore point for 60 years.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Energy minister leaves Government after two weeks for health reasons
Energy minister leaves Government after two weeks for health reasons

The Independent

time21 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Energy minister leaves Government after two weeks for health reasons

From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging. At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story. The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it. Your support makes all the difference.

How do we regulate a future not yet written?
How do we regulate a future not yet written?

Finextra

time36 minutes ago

  • Finextra

How do we regulate a future not yet written?

0 This content has been selected, created and edited by the Finextra editorial team based upon its relevance and interest to our community. This is an excerpt from The Future of European Fintech 2025: A Money20/20 Special Edition. According to the European Fintech Association, the fintech industry has attracted the largest share of all VC funding over the last five years, worth around $85 billion. This showcases the strong potential of fintech in Europe, and how the sector will be a driver for economic growth – with the industry expecting to grow more than fivefold over 2021 figures (5.5x) and be worth $190 billion by 2030. As fintech increasingly enters the social and economic fabric of Europe, the question of governance is no longer one of compliance with rules. In 2025, new rules such as PSD3, MiCA, DORA, and MiFID II are beginning to converge. Even though their real impact will be a five- to 10 year play, actually rewriting the way fintech is imagined, deployed, and depended upon will happen in real-time. As Vibhor Narang, executive director, structured solutions cash management, transaction banking, Europe, Standard Chartered, observes, 'the evolving regulatory landscape in Europe is not merely reshaping fintech. It's redefining the very foundations of financial innovation and collaboration.' Regulation will be more innovation driver than compliance tool Looking forward to beyond 2025, regulation will be less of a brake and more of an active driver of innovation. The convergence of PSD3, MiCA, DORA, and MiFID II shows a Europe which is open, transparent, and bestows data rights that are not just regulated but architected to foster competitive environments. In Julija Fescenko, head of marketing and communication, Magnetiq Bank's view, 'these combined forces will drive standardisation and foster more innovation-friendly environments, provided implementation does not stifle agility.' The industry should expect regulators stepping in to design digital infrastructure, particularly in relation to open finance. PSD3's extension into safe data portability will broaden, enabling consumers to seamlessly coordinate financial experiences between providers in the future, just like APIs do with software. Narang goes on: 'PSD3's extension into open finance […] is connecting previously siloed financial products into cohesive customer journeys. This could influence the rise of modular finance: hyper-personalised financial 17 services constructed dynamically through regulated data-sharing protocols.' Operational resilience will become a competitive differentiator By 2030, operational resilience will not be a regulatory checkbox under DORA but a market expectation. Financial institutions that can assure service continuity and cybersecurity against volatility will be more trusted. Johnnie Martin, senior associate, Augmentum Fintech, believes that 'the need for the robust back-up systems required by DORA was brough into sharp relief.' He adds: 'Fintechs are uniquely placed to deliver solutions to many of the problems that these regulations are trying to solve.' The fintech sector can expect fintech firms to create resilience-as-a-service offerings, including third-party monitoring products, stress tests managed by software, and disaster recovery solutions made in modules. With the entire fintech value chain now in the spotlight, resilience will no longer be each company's concern but a collective responsibility across the ecosystem. MiCA will unleash a tokenised finance boom MiCA's launch in 2025 is only the start. Within the next ten years, it will standardise digital asset adoption throughout Europe, opening doors to mass tokenisation of traditional assets, programmable payments, and the emergence of regulated stablecoins. This view is shared by Narang, who clarified that 'MiCA's unified framework […] is creating unprecedented opportunities for regulated innovation in digital assets.' In the future, controlled digital wallets that can deal with fiat and tokenised assets may be incorporated into mainstream banks. MiCA will prompt traditional institutions to enter Web3 finance, especially as corporate treasuries search for programmable yield-generating products. Regulation will, however, have to catch up with innovation in DeFi, which MiCA addresses only marginally at present. This suggests the introduction of MiCA II, a second, more advanced regulatory layer that addresses staking, algorithmic stablecoins, and cross-border DeFi protocols. Europe is at a fintech leadership fork While Europe once led the world in open banking, that leadership is now in question. Ahmed Badr, chief operating officer, GoCardless, explores how 'Europe led the world in open banking innovation a decade ago, but is now at risk of falling behind as other countries leapfrog ahead.' The next few years will tell whether the continent doubles down on competitive, consumer-driven innovation, or allows red tape to stifle momentum. Badr calls for 'greater ambition and support for innovators,' and that need is likely to intensify as global players, especially in Asia and the Middle East, move aggressively on embedded finance and real-time cross-border infrastructure. AI governance will define institutional trust The most uncertain, and urgent, regulatory horizon is artificial intelligence. By 2030, AI will be embedded into every tier of financial services, from real-time lending decisions to autonomous risk scoring and investor advice. But trust in this future hinges on one factor: ethical regulation. Tom Moore, head of financial services at Moore Kingston Smith, mentions that 'the risks of bias, misinformation, or system failure are very real. These will only grow as generative AI is used more and more for personalised financial advice.' Leading institutions are already preparing for this shift. Wendy Redshaw, chief digital information officer, NatWest Group, outlines a framework based on explainability, fairness, and human oversight: 'We ensure AI systems are subject to human oversight […] that their decisions can be explained, and that they are free from unfair bias.' Standard Chartered has also formalised this approach with its Responsible Artificial Intelligence Framework, embedding 'governance, continuous oversight, and robust data privacy into every deployment. Leadership will be defined by those who not only harness the power of AI, but also set the benchmark for ethical stewardship,' says Narang. By the end of the decade, we predict a harmonised European AI regulation for financial services, likely inspired by the EU AI Act but more tailored to the risk profile of finance. This will require firms to perform continuous AI audits, maintain decision traceability, and prove non-discrimination by design. Governance will become real-time and inclusive As data quantities grow and digital services get spread across third-party platforms, strict regulation will become less suitable. Europe's governance model will be required to change towards real-time supervision that combines regtech solutions, AI-driven anomaly detection, and adaptive policy updates. This implies a future where regulators and businesses collaborate continuously and in the long term, rather than sporadically through compliance tests. Fescenko continues to say that 'fintech companies must take the initiative in self-regulation. This involves conducting regular AI audits and implementing strong governance structures.' Ultimately, regulatory agility will become as critical as business agility. Toward a new regulatory future Europe's regulation of fintech is changing from a rulebook-based approach to a co-created, principle-based approach. The successful institutions will be those that redefine compliance a constraining idea rather than as a strategic background for expansion and growth. Redshaw says 'we are focused on aligning innovation with regulation. Our priority remains on supporting customers with the best, safest and most compliant digital experiences.' Looking ahead, regulation will no longer chase innovation, it will partner with it. The governance of tomorrow will demand new capabilities: regulatory forecasting, ethical design thinking, real-time oversight, and cross-sector collaboration. As Narang aptly concludes: 'The institutions that will thrive […] will be those that view regulatory compliance not as a burden, but as a strategic enabler that builds trust, enhances service delivery, and accelerates responsible innovation.' Europe now has the opportunity to set the gold standard for fintech regulation in the digital age, not by slowing change, but by governing it wisely.

Musk bombshell fears grow for Prince Andrew after Trump feud Epstein 'bomb'
Musk bombshell fears grow for Prince Andrew after Trump feud Epstein 'bomb'

Daily Mirror

time37 minutes ago

  • Daily Mirror

Musk bombshell fears grow for Prince Andrew after Trump feud Epstein 'bomb'

Fears are growing over Elon Musk's next possible move after he claimed Trump was named in the Epstein files - There is no suggestion Trump knew of any crimes or participated in any criminal behaviour Donald Trump declared open war on Elon Musk, branding the billionaire "a man who's lost his mind". The outburst came less than 24 hours after the world's richest man claimed the US leader's name appears in the FBI's Jeffrey Epstein files, adding it was the reason they had not been made public. Any hopes of reconciliation between the two former allies were obliterated today after Musk hinted at a truce, only for Trump to respond with full-scale personal attacks. "I'm not even thinking about Elon," the president said. "He's got a problem. The poor guy's got a problem. I won't be speaking to him for a while, I guess, but I wish him well." ‌ ‌ When asked if he would accept Musk's call, Trump shot back, "You mean the man who has lost his mind?" The explosion follows Musk's nuclear accusation he posted directly to his own platform, X, on Thursday, that the US leader is named in the secret Epstein files. "Time to drop the really big bomb: @realDonaldTrump is in the Epstein files," Musk wrote. "That is the real reason they have not been made public. Have a nice day, DJT!" The claim sent shockwaves through Washington and plunged the White House into emergency crisis mode. There is no suggestion Donald Trump knew of any crimes or participated in any criminal behaviour. Today, fears emerged that Musk could publicly name Prince Andrew, who has vehemently and repeatedly denied any wrongdoing during his friendship with Epstein, as one of the powerful men identified in the files, dragging him once more into the spotlight regarding his friendship with the disgraced financier. The Mirror has learnt Musk has been privately telling associates he has "direct knowledge" of the classified Epstein evidence from his four months working in the White House. He claims that "dozens of powerful men" are named, including the Duke of York, who was pictured with his late pal on numerous occasions. There is no suggestion Prince Andrew knew of any crimes or participated in any criminal behaviour. ‌ During their friendship, Andrew was a guest of Epstein at his home throughout the States, while the royal hosted Epstein at the royal palaces. The Duke also flew on the American's private jet, according to court-released flight logs. Insiders say Epstein's entire inner circle - from Mar-a-Lago to Manhattan - is now in full-blown panic. "If Elon's willing to drop Trump, no one is safe, not even royalty," said one senior Washington DC source. "While he had close ties to the Trump administration, Musk had eyes and ears everywhere. He knows exactly who was connected to Epstein and how deep it goes. No one could do more damage to Trump world than Elon right now, and the President's aides know it." ‌ Musk's erratic behaviour, amid reports of heavy ketamine and drug use, has made him a volatile and unpredictable threat. Another insider warned: "You've got the world's richest man with access to explosive material, a platform to drop it on 185 million people, and if the allegations are true, whose mind is not always thinking clearly. That's not just dangerous. It's a nightmare." The Trump administration is reportedly watching Musk "like a hawk," with some MAGA allies trying to broker a peace deal to stop Musk from making more incendiary claims about his former boss. "If that means Elon throws other people under the bus and not him, then Trump will be all for it," added the source. ‌ In February, Attorney General Pam Bondi released a heavily redacted tranche of Epstein files, including partial flight logs and blurred-out names. She has since released a small amount of papers that the FBI has handed over, though thousands more still remain unreleased. A former national security aide added: "If Musk dumps what he knows, it won't just shake politics. It'll shatter the global elite." Tensions between Trump and his former 'First Buddy' Musk, are so high that the president is now moving to sever every remaining tie with the man who bankrolled his return to the White House. He's ditching the Tesla he bought in a very public show of support. In March, Trump paid full price for a red Tesla, telling aides he wanted to "support Elon" amid a wave of anti-Tesla protests and attacks across America. The vehicle is currently parked at the White House and is intended for staff use. Now, a senior official confirmed to The Mirror that Trump plans to sell it or give it away. ‌ "He doesn't want anything to do with Musk," the official said. "Not even the car." The fallout is deeply personal. Last year, Musk pumped hundreds of millions of dollars into Trump's re-election. He restored his X account and helped engineer the property mogul's digital resurrection. Back then, Trump talked about transparency and pledged to reveal the names in the Epstein files if re-elected. ‌ During an appearance on the Lex Fridman Podcast last year, he said: "I never went to his island, fortunately. But a lot of people did." Asked why so many powerful figures were drawn to Epstein, Trump said: "He was a good salesman, a hailing, hardy guy, and he had some nice assets that he'd throw around like islands. But a lot of big people went to that island. But fortunately, I was not one of them." Fridman pressed further on why the client list hadn't been released. Trump replied: "Yeah, it's very interesting, isn't it? It probably will be, by the way. I'd certainly take a look at it. But yeah, I'd be inclined to do the Epstein." Musk was rewarded for his support of Trump. The president appointed him head of the newly created and powerful Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), a role that saw him slash tens of thousands of federal jobs - a move hailed by MAGA loyalists but condemned across America. ‌ However, their alliance began to collapse after Trump's "Big, Beautiful" £980 billion spending bill gutted electric vehicle tax credits, wiping nearly £22 billion off Tesla's market value. Musk was livid. Tesla stock nosedived. He blamed Trump. Now, insiders say the president has a new strategy: cut Musk off completely and neutralise him before he can do more damage. The White House is watching the tech mogul "like a hawk," said one source, terrified of what he might reveal next. ‌ "You've got the world's richest man, reportedly using ketamine and other drugs, in possession of a platform that can broadcast to billions of people and allegedly sitting on a file that could blow up the global elite," they added. "That's not a red flag. That's a five-alarm fire." Trump's attorney general, Pam Bondi, has so far only released a partial dump of the Epstein materials - a limp, heavily redacted batch of flight logs and contact pages in February. She's demanded thousands more pages from the FBI's New York field office but has offered no timeline or reason for the delay. And with Musk now threatening to take matters into his own hands, the pressure is exploding inside the highest levels of government. ‌ "If he dumps what he knows," said a former national security advisor, "it won't just shake politics. It'll detonate the global elite." On Thursday, after Musk claimed Trump's name was contained in the Epstein files, he doubled down on his attack. Among a barrage of social media posts attacking the president, he threatened to decommission a spacecraft contracted to NASA and needed to return astronauts from the International Space Station. Although he later retracted the threat, the Tesla CEO agreed with another post, saying that Trump should be impeached and JD Vance should replace him. He also followed up his original tweet by asking his followers to "Mark this post for the future. The truth will come out." He then posted: "The Trump tariffs will cause a recession in the second half of this year." Steve Bannon, one of Musk's most vocal critics for months, said he advised the president to cancel all of Musk's government contracts and launch several investigations into the world's richest man "They should initiate a formal investigation of his immigration status because I am of the strong belief that he is an illegal alien, and he should be deported from the country immediately," he said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store