INTERVIEW - Merkel ally warns protectionism would hurt U.S. consumers

Reuters  |  BERLIN 

By Andreas Rinke

(Reuters) - It is as hard to imagine how the U.S. could force American consumers to stop buying German cars as it is to conceive of the German persuading Germans to buy U.S.-made cars, a key ally of Chancellor Angela Merkel said.

Juergen Hardt, the German government's coordinator for transatlantic policies, said in an interview with that it was not possible for the to try to intervene to reduce Germany's surpluses and that economies perform better thanks to competition - rather than isolation.

"I don't see any possibility of artificially reducing German surpluses," said Hardt, the foreign policy expert in parliament for Merkel's conservative Christian Democrats ahead of Merkel's trip to meet U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday.

"Do we really want to try to force German citizens to buy American cars?" Hardt added. "Does the American president want to force Americans to stop buying German cars in the future? Do we want to artificially make German cars more expensive with taxes so that consumers buy more foreign products?"

The United States is Germany's biggest single export destination and U.S. President Donald Trump has warned that his administration will impose a border tax of 35 percent on cars that German carmaker BMW BMWG.DE plans to build at a new plant in Mexico and export to the U.S.

Germany's surplus climbed to a record high in 2016, rising to 252.9 billion euros ($270.05 billion), surpassing the previous high of 244.3 billion euros in 2015.

Dismissing criticism from Trump administration adviser Peter Navarro that was exploiting a weak euro to gain a advantage, Hardt said the quality of German exports was the key to their success, not exchange rates.

As well as being foreign policy spokesman for Merkel's conservative Christian Democratic Union, Hardt is also Germany's senior parliamentarian on transatlantic relations and knows the direction of German thinking.

Navarro, head of Trump's new National Council, had accused of using a "grossly undervalued" euro to gain a competitive advantage.

Navarro said on Monday the $65 billion U.S. deficit with was "one of the most difficult" issues, and bilateral discussions were needed to reduce it outside of European Union restrictions.

On Monday he depicted chronic deficits as a threat to national security and said the Trump administration would seek to "reclaim" parts supply chains that had moved overseas.

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble on Tuesday firmly rejected the U.S. criticism, setting the stage for a heated debate on when G20 policymakers meet next week in the German spa town of Baden-Baden.

Hardt also defended Germany's strong performance as the result of the competitiveness of the country's industry.

"German products are almost always the most expensive in any given segment," said Hardt. "German companies are competing with quality as their argument and not any kind of price dumping."

He added that if the United States wants to become truly "great" again, then it should stand up to the global competition and not allow it to be weakened through isolation.

"That's actually an economic truism which one needs to remind some people in Washington about," added Hardt.

(Writing by Erik Kirschbaum)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

INTERVIEW - Merkel ally warns protectionism would hurt U.S. consumers

BERLIN (Reuters) - It is as hard to imagine how the U.S. government could force American consumers to stop buying German cars as it is to conceive of the German government persuading Germans to buy U.S.-made cars, a key ally of Chancellor Angela Merkel said.

By Andreas Rinke

(Reuters) - It is as hard to imagine how the U.S. could force American consumers to stop buying German cars as it is to conceive of the German persuading Germans to buy U.S.-made cars, a key ally of Chancellor Angela Merkel said.

Juergen Hardt, the German government's coordinator for transatlantic policies, said in an interview with that it was not possible for the to try to intervene to reduce Germany's surpluses and that economies perform better thanks to competition - rather than isolation.

"I don't see any possibility of artificially reducing German surpluses," said Hardt, the foreign policy expert in parliament for Merkel's conservative Christian Democrats ahead of Merkel's trip to meet U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday.

"Do we really want to try to force German citizens to buy American cars?" Hardt added. "Does the American president want to force Americans to stop buying German cars in the future? Do we want to artificially make German cars more expensive with taxes so that consumers buy more foreign products?"

The United States is Germany's biggest single export destination and U.S. President Donald Trump has warned that his administration will impose a border tax of 35 percent on cars that German carmaker BMW BMWG.DE plans to build at a new plant in Mexico and export to the U.S.

Germany's surplus climbed to a record high in 2016, rising to 252.9 billion euros ($270.05 billion), surpassing the previous high of 244.3 billion euros in 2015.

Dismissing criticism from Trump administration adviser Peter Navarro that was exploiting a weak euro to gain a advantage, Hardt said the quality of German exports was the key to their success, not exchange rates.

As well as being foreign policy spokesman for Merkel's conservative Christian Democratic Union, Hardt is also Germany's senior parliamentarian on transatlantic relations and knows the direction of German thinking.

Navarro, head of Trump's new National Council, had accused of using a "grossly undervalued" euro to gain a competitive advantage.

Navarro said on Monday the $65 billion U.S. deficit with was "one of the most difficult" issues, and bilateral discussions were needed to reduce it outside of European Union restrictions.

On Monday he depicted chronic deficits as a threat to national security and said the Trump administration would seek to "reclaim" parts supply chains that had moved overseas.

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble on Tuesday firmly rejected the U.S. criticism, setting the stage for a heated debate on when G20 policymakers meet next week in the German spa town of Baden-Baden.

Hardt also defended Germany's strong performance as the result of the competitiveness of the country's industry.

"German products are almost always the most expensive in any given segment," said Hardt. "German companies are competing with quality as their argument and not any kind of price dumping."

He added that if the United States wants to become truly "great" again, then it should stand up to the global competition and not allow it to be weakened through isolation.

"That's actually an economic truism which one needs to remind some people in Washington about," added Hardt.

(Writing by Erik Kirschbaum)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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