Trump's global trade war comes to Alabama
Jimmy Lyons ought to be sleeping soundly. Business is good at the port in Mobile, which he oversees as chief executive officer of the Alabama State Port Authority. European aviation giant Airbus SE is expanding a plant nearby that relies on the port for shipments of critical parts. And near Tuscaloosa, a 3½-hour drive north, things are humming at a Mercedes-Benz plant, which is one reason the port authority is building a new auto export facility.
But Lyons has plenty to worry about. Alabama may have avoided the wrath of Hurricane Dorian in September (despite President Trumps forecasts), but the trade wars threaten to bring a severe economic storm down on the state. The thing that keeps me up at night is a global recession, says Lyons. Ive seen what it can do to our business. It dips very quickly and comes back very slowly.
The conflict with China has already caused a collapse in grain exports from Mobile. A slowdown in the global economy would hit outbound shipments of metallurgical coal that account for 12 million of the 28 million tons of goods that pass through the port annually. But what looms largest in Alabama these days is the possibility that Trump will open a new European front in his global trade wars.
In early October, the Trump administration is expected to roll out tariffs on imports from the European Union. The duties are being authorized by the World Trade Organization, which in 2018 ruled in the U.S.s favor in a long-running dispute over illegal subsidies for Airbus. (An announcement from the WTO on the value of goods that can be tariffed is imminent.) Then in November the president faces a self-imposed deadline to decide whether to go ahead with auto tariffs that would target big European carmakers such as Mercedes, which has been making vehicles in Alabama since the 1990s.
Trump has called the EU worse than China when it comes to its trade relationship with the U.S. Through July the U.S. had a $103 billion trade deficit in goods with the EU, with cars and auto parts making up a big chunk of that. Duties on Airbuss imports of fuselages, landing gear, and other components made in Europe would also go some way toward addressing the trade imbalance with the EU.
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