The International Monetary Fund warned Friday that the steel and aluminium tariffs announced by president Donald Trump will harm the US and global economies.
“The import restrictions announced by the US president are likely to cause damage not only outside the US, but also to the US economy itself,” IMF spokesman Gerry Rice said in a statement.
He said the move raises fears other countries could use national security rationale “to justify broad-based import restrictions,” and urged countries to work to resolve trade disagreements without such extremes.
It was the latest international reaction to Trump’s announcement Thursday that he will impose 25 per cent tariffs on steel imports and 10 per cent on aluminium, raising fears of a trade war and sending global stock markets tumbling.
Those fears were exacerbated early Friday when Trump welcomed a trade war in a blistering series of tweets, saying they are “good and easy to win.”
He raised the stakes saying he would seek to impose “reciprocal taxes” on all imports from trading partners that have duties on US exports.
Rice urged countries to step back from such harsh steps.
“We encourage the US and its trading partners to work constructively together to reduce trade barriers and to resolve trade disagreements without resort to such emergency measures.”
He noted that the steel and aluminium taxes would hurt the manufacturing and construction sectors, which are major users of aluminium and steel.