logo
#

Latest news with #G7FinanceMinisters

Trade disputes should be resolved as quickly as possible, Germany says ahead of G7
Trade disputes should be resolved as quickly as possible, Germany says ahead of G7

Reuters

time20-05-2025

  • Business
  • Reuters

Trade disputes should be resolved as quickly as possible, Germany says ahead of G7

BERLIN, May 20 (Reuters) - Ongoing trade disputes with the United States should be resolved as quickly as possible for the benefit of all, German Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil said on Tuesday, ahead of meeting his counterparts from other Group of Seven countries. "Tariffs and uncertainties are a burden on our economy and therefore also on job security," Klingbeil said in Berlin before leaving for a G7 finance ministers meeting in Banff, Canada. The Trump administration has imposed a 25% tariff on U.S. imports of steel, aluminium and cars, as well as a baseline 10% tariff on almost all countries, with additional "reciprocal" tariffs - making for a combined 20% in the EU's case - lined up if negotiations during a 90-day pause fail. Germany and the European Union want to find an agreement with Washington, but the clock is ticking. "At the same time, as the largest single market in the world, we are determined to defend our interests," Klingbeil said of the EU. He welcomed the opportunity of meeting his G7 colleagues in person after he took office two weeks ago, noting that strengthening international cooperation was more important than ever in view of global upheavals. "We must send a crystal-clear signal that the G7 will continue to stand firmly by Ukraine's side," Klingbeil said, adding that the group was doing everything it could to secure a fair and lasting peace. Another topic in G7 meetings will be the reconstruction of Ukraine after "the terrible destruction caused by Russian President Vladimir Putin's war", and especially how private investment can be mobilised, Klingbeil said.

G7 finance leaders to seek US consensus on non-tariff issues at Canada meeting
G7 finance leaders to seek US consensus on non-tariff issues at Canada meeting

Reuters

time19-05-2025

  • Business
  • Reuters

G7 finance leaders to seek US consensus on non-tariff issues at Canada meeting

WASHINGTON/BANFF, Alberta, May 19 (Reuters) - Finance leaders from the Group of Seven democracies will strive for a show of unity when they meet this week on topics other than U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs, including economic security, Ukraine and artificial intelligence cooperation. But mostly, they'll want to keep the powerful Western policy alliance from fracturing, even if it means less-specific language and agreed actions, according to G7 officials and economic diplomacy experts. U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent will join fellow G7 finance ministers and central bank governors for the Tuesday-to-Thursday meeting in the Canadian Rocky Mountain resort town of Banff, Alberta. That puts disagreements over steep new tariffs imposed by Trump at the center of the discussions. G7 members Japan, Germany, France and Italy all face a potential doubling of U.S. "reciprocal" duties to 20% or more in early July. Britain negotiated a limited trade deal that leaves it saddled with 10% U.S. tariffs on most goods, and host Canada is still struggling with Trump's separate 25% duty on many exports. "No one expects this to be a big moment where the U.S. declares that for G7 and other partners there will be a special regime that's more favorable," said Charles Lichfield, deputy director of the Atlantic Council's GeoEconomics Center in Washington. But ministers from the other six countries will likely try to tactfully remind Bessent that they are the closest U.S. allies and that it's difficult for them to meet Washington's demands that they exert economic pressure on China when they are facing U.S. coercion themselves, Lichfield said. A Treasury spokesperson said on Sunday that Bessent would seek to get the G7 "back to basics and focused on addressing imbalances and non-market practices in both G7 and non-G7 countries." Bessent, a former hedge fund manager, has consistently called for pushback against China's state-led, export-driven economic model that has fueled excess production capacity and a flood of subsidized goods into market economies. In bilateral meetings with Bessent, some of the ministers are expected to further their own negotiations to lower Trump's tariffs. Bessent is leading the negotiations with Japan, which has been described by administration officials as being in advanced talks with the U.S. The Treasury secretary said on Sunday that countries that don't negotiate "in good faith" will again face the higher reciprocal tariff rates that Trump imposed on April 2 -- 24% in Japan's case. Bessent is widely seen as a moderating influence on Trump's trade agenda, so G7 ministers will "encourage him to push for more moderate administration policies on trade," said Mark Sobel, a former U.S. Treasury and International Monetary Fund official who is U.S. chairman of OMFIF, an independent financial policy think-tank. Despite disagreements over tariffs, G7 officials, especially from host Canada, appear determined to agree on a joint statement from the finance meeting, which will set the stage for a G7 leaders' summit in June in the nearby mountain resort area of Kananaskis. G7 government sources familiar with the finance negotiations said that a draft communique was already prepared and that Canada was pushing to achieve a consensus to show that the G7 countries were standing together on a range of issues. These are expected to include a broad statement of support for Ukraine in its struggle against Russia's full-scale invasion, with Ukrainian Finance Minister Serhii Marchenko in attendance and the EU readying a new package of sanctions to increase pressure on Moscow. Any statement on Ukraine will be far less specific than the G7's last joint finance statement, opens new tab in October 2024, which announced terms for $50 billion in loans to Ukraine backed by earnings from frozen Russia's sovereign assets. The Atlantic Council's Lichfield said that after the failure of ceasefire talks in Istanbul on Friday that were spurned by Russian President Vladimir Putin, Bessent and fellow G7 ministers may be more likely to agree on some language supportive of increased sanctions pressure without actually committing to take specific action. Another area for common ground is likely to be on support for the IMF and World Bank after Bessent reaffirmed U.S. backing for the institutions in April. G7 sources said that cooperation to fight money laundering and other financial crimes are another topic where agreements are reachable, as well as on Bessent's call for stronger reliance on the private sector to drive growth. But given Trump's opposition to the previous U.S. green energy agenda, language on climate change is expected to be a source of discord. How the G7 will describe the economic uncertainty and stalled investment unleashed by Trump's tariffs without explicitly blaming his policies is another thorny issue in the negotiations. "My crystal ball is so murky now, I can't really see the future very well," said Suzanne Clark, CEO of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce at a conference in Ottawa of business leaders from the G7 countries. "I think we have to advocate for the future ... (where the business community globally can share values of democracy and rule of law, enterprise and open market," she added.

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