logo
Europe looks east to counter Trump's tariffs and fear of Russia

Europe looks east to counter Trump's tariffs and fear of Russia

European leaders have turned towards Asia in a bid to form a trading bloc to counter US President Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs, raising hopes in Australia for a deal to boost trade by $106 billion.
Australian business leaders welcomed the plans from European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen for closer ties with Asia, seeing it as a step towards cutting trade barriers on cars, food and investment.
The trade agenda is being shaped by concerns in Europe on the economic conflict with the US over tariffs and the military threats from Russia, leading it to seek stronger alliances with like-minded nations.
In a clear overture to Asia, the EU president has declared her interest in opening Europe to one of the world's largest trade blocs, known as the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), which includes Australia, as well as Japan, South Korea and Canada.
Australian leaders, speaking during a delegation to Europe, said the EU was looking for 'fellow travellers' to shore up its security.
'There is now something of an imperative for this,' said Duncan Lewis, the former Australian ambassador to NATO, former head of ASIO and now the chair of the European Australia Business Council (EABC).
'We do need to move together and operate together with the EU so that commerce can move freely, investment can move more freely, and produce such as agricultural goods can move more freely.
'But all of that is, of course, underpinned by this fact that Europe now feels threatened.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

ASX set to fall, Wall Street rises as Tesla rallies; Microsoft cuts 9000 jobs
ASX set to fall, Wall Street rises as Tesla rallies; Microsoft cuts 9000 jobs

Sydney Morning Herald

timean hour ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

ASX set to fall, Wall Street rises as Tesla rallies; Microsoft cuts 9000 jobs

US stock indexes are drifting higher on Wednesday, ahead of a highly anticipated report about how the US job market is holding up amid uncertainty about President Donald Trump's tariffs. The S&P 500 was up 0.3 per cent in afternoon trading and on track to set a record for the third time in four days. The Dow Jones was down 50 points, or 0.1 per cent, in mid-afternoon trade, and the Nasdaq composite was 0.8 per cent higher. The Australian sharemarket is set to retreat with futures at 4.53am AEST pointing to a fall of 24 points, or 0.3 per cent, at the open. The ASX added 0.7 per cent on Wednesday to close at a fresh record. The Australian dollar was steady. It was fetching 65.83 US cents at 5.03am Treasury yields were mixed in the bond market ahead of Thursday's report, which will show how many jobs US employers created and destroyed last month. The widespread expectation is that they hired more people than they fired but that the pace of hiring slowed from May. A stunningly weak report released Wednesday morning, though, raised worries that Thursday's report may fall short. The data from ADP suggested that US employers outside the government cut 33,000 jobs from their payrolls last month, when economists were expecting to see growth of 115,000 jobs. Loading 'Though layoffs continue to be rare, a hesitancy to hire and a reluctance to replace departing workers led to job losses last month,' according to Nela Richardson, chief economist at ADP. The ADP report does not have a perfect track record predicting what the US government's more comprehensive jobs report will say each month. That preserves some hope that Thursday's data could be more encouraging. But a fear has been that uncertainty around Trump's tariffs could cause employers to freeze their hiring. Many of Trump's stiff proposed taxes on imports are currently on pause, and they're scheduled to kick into effect in about a week. Unless Trump reaches deals with other countries to lower the tariffs, they could hurt the economy and worsen inflation.

ASX set to fall, Wall Street rises as Tesla rallies; Microsoft cuts 9000 jobs
ASX set to fall, Wall Street rises as Tesla rallies; Microsoft cuts 9000 jobs

The Age

timean hour ago

  • The Age

ASX set to fall, Wall Street rises as Tesla rallies; Microsoft cuts 9000 jobs

US stock indexes are drifting higher on Wednesday, ahead of a highly anticipated report about how the US job market is holding up amid uncertainty about President Donald Trump's tariffs. The S&P 500 was up 0.3 per cent in afternoon trading and on track to set a record for the third time in four days. The Dow Jones was down 50 points, or 0.1 per cent, in mid-afternoon trade, and the Nasdaq composite was 0.8 per cent higher. The Australian sharemarket is set to retreat with futures at 4.53am AEST pointing to a fall of 24 points, or 0.3 per cent, at the open. The ASX added 0.7 per cent on Wednesday to close at a fresh record. The Australian dollar was steady. It was fetching 65.83 US cents at 5.03am Treasury yields were mixed in the bond market ahead of Thursday's report, which will show how many jobs US employers created and destroyed last month. The widespread expectation is that they hired more people than they fired but that the pace of hiring slowed from May. A stunningly weak report released Wednesday morning, though, raised worries that Thursday's report may fall short. The data from ADP suggested that US employers outside the government cut 33,000 jobs from their payrolls last month, when economists were expecting to see growth of 115,000 jobs. Loading 'Though layoffs continue to be rare, a hesitancy to hire and a reluctance to replace departing workers led to job losses last month,' according to Nela Richardson, chief economist at ADP. The ADP report does not have a perfect track record predicting what the US government's more comprehensive jobs report will say each month. That preserves some hope that Thursday's data could be more encouraging. But a fear has been that uncertainty around Trump's tariffs could cause employers to freeze their hiring. Many of Trump's stiff proposed taxes on imports are currently on pause, and they're scheduled to kick into effect in about a week. Unless Trump reaches deals with other countries to lower the tariffs, they could hurt the economy and worsen inflation.

Albanese is the conservative who mugged the Liberals. Let's hope he seizes the moment
Albanese is the conservative who mugged the Liberals. Let's hope he seizes the moment

Sydney Morning Herald

time2 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Albanese is the conservative who mugged the Liberals. Let's hope he seizes the moment

Anthony Albanese is a man who likes props. In the 2022 election campaign, he regularly brandished a one-dollar coin to emphasise his support for a pay rise for workers on the minimum wage. And in the lead-up to this year's election, he employed his Medicare card as a talisman to ward off Peter Dutton's supposedly evil plans for the nation's healthcare system. Clearly, his approach has worked. Everyone has a Medicare card and Albanese was wise to embed in the public consciousness that Medicare is a Labor Party creation, implemented by Bob Hawke's government in 1984 against the fierce opposition of the Coalition. Because Medicare, for all its shortcomings, is an entrenched and popular feature of everyday Australian life, the Labor Party of today has been able to leverage Hawke's long-ago policy success to its great advantage. There's upside for the ALP in portraying itself as a defender of institutions, as it can make the party look less risky, and Albanese leant into this heavily during the election campaign. At his recent post-election address at the National Press Club, he outlined the reasons Labor had won a second term. Electors, he said, had voted for Australian values and for doing things 'our way' – that is, not like Donald Trump and Trump-wannabe Peter Dutton. He also cited Labor's 'commitment to fair wages and conditions, universal Medicare and universal superannuation' that 'set us apart from the world'. In some respects, it's a conservative formulation for a centre-left party: preserving what's already in place. And that signals some potential downside for the government. Universal super was the joint brainchild of Paul Keating and the ACTU's Bill Kelty as part of the union movement's Accord agreement, which also gave rise to Medicare. The historically transformational nature of universal super has been brought into sharp focus this week, with the attainment of the compulsory 12 per cent super contribution and the wider discussion about super balances in the millions of dollars. Inevitably, talk of that achievement invites comparisons between the current Labor government and the all-conquering five-term government led first by Hawke and then Keating. Hawke and Keating wasted no time in office. The Albanese government is 38 months old. Inside the same timeframe, the Hawke government had held two summits – on the economy and on tax – and introduced Medicare, a new incomes policy, an assets test on pensions, floated the dollar, changed the banking system, begun the march on super and produced a comprehensive new package of tax measures. Loading Somewhere within the Labor Party, people will eventually start to ask what a Labor leader 40 years from now will be fighting to preserve from the Albanese years. The course that the prime minister is pursuing – backed strongly by Labor's national secretary Paul Erickson, who has definitely earned his status as the nation's campaigning guru du jour – is the one that secured the government's second victory. In short, the government's first priority will be about delivering methodically on its promises, namely reducing HECS debts, building 1.2 million homes, continuing the push towards renewables, increasing the number of Medicare urgent clinics, and continuing to keep inflation down. That makes sense, especially since the national political scene is now a bunch of players who have, to an extent, been mugged by reality. Everyone is a smartie after the event, but no one expected a Labor landslide. The government wasn't geared up for it. The Liberals had even less of a clue. None of the polls predicted it. YouGov got closest; its central projection was 84 lower house seats for Labor – a mild increase on its majority but still 10 short of the actual, stratospheric result.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store