Menú

U.S. Chamber of Commerce: Chamber Submits Comments to USTR on Unfair Trade Practices

Tiempo
de lectura:
3 min
Ahora estás leyendo: U.S. Chamber of Commerce: Chamber Submits Comments to USTR on Unfair Trade Practices
Tiempo
de lectura:
3 min
Escribe: U.S. Chamber of Commerce

Friday, March 14, 2025

The U.S. Chamber on March 11 submitted comments to the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative in response to its Federal Register Notice seeking input in connection with its review of unfair trade practices by other countries. In the notice, USTR outlined a focus on G20 countries and those with which the United States has its largest bilateral trade deficits.

No to Broad-Based Tariffs: Drawing on extensive member input, the Chamber focused on the need for a more proactive U.S. trade agenda, the potential harms of broad-based tariffs, and the inappropriateness of tariffs as a response to issues such as trade deficits, which do not arise from foreign trade barriers. The comments note that U.S. businesses need additional enforceable trade agreements and that pursuing such pacts is a good avenue to eliminating trade barriers:

“The best pro-growth response to foreign trade barriers is to negotiate enforceable trade agreements to eliminate tariffs and other trade barriers, open foreign markets, and guarantee reciprocity. Such an approach will provide U.S. manufacturers with predictability in our supply chains to drive international exports.”

Trade Deficit Myths: The U.S. Chamber also contends that the overall U.S. trade deficit is not the result of foreign trade barriers, expressing agreement with the vast majority of economists who argue that “foreign import barriers and exports subsidies are not the reason for the US trade deficit,” adding:

“In fact, higher tariffs lead to higher trade deficits, not surpluses. According to a Chamber review of data from the Geneva-based International Trade Center and UNCTAD, 25 of the 30 countries with the world’s highest tariffs have trade deficits. The overwhelming majority of these high-tariff countries have very low incomes, and the few high-tariff countries with trade surpluses—such as Algeria, Chad, and Congo—serve as poor models for U.S. economic policy.”

Noticias relacionadas

GetAbstract: recomendaciones de lectura #102

Escribe: GetAbstract y Amcham Perú
Leer más

Reserva Federal de Estados Unidos mantiene tasas y recorta proyección de crecimiento de EEUU

Escribe: AmCham Perú
Leer más

BBVA Research ajusta al alza proyección de crecimiento para Perú de 2.7% a 3.1%

Escribe: AmCham Perú
Leer más

Deloitte lanza una nueva edición del Estudio Global Automotriz

Escribe: Comunicación Corporativa
Leer más

INEI: economía peruana mantuvo su dinamismo en enero y creció 4.1%

Escribe: AmCham Perú
Leer más

GetAbstract: recomendaciones de lectura #101

Escribe: GetAbstract y Amcham Perú
Leer más

BCRP: empleo formal inició el 2025 en crecimiento

Escribe: AmCham Perú
Leer más

U.S. Chamber of Commerce: Chamber Submits Comments to USTR on Unfair Trade Practices

Escribe: U.S. Chamber of Commerce
Leer más

Grupo UNACEM alcanza un EBITDA de S/1,660 millones en 2024

Escribe: Comunicación Corporativa
Leer más

Nuevo Reglamento de la Ley de Protección de Datos Personales: La Figura del Oficial de Datos Personales

Escribe: Alejandro Vargas, Gerente Senior de Servicios Legales de KPMG en Perú
Leer más

Reuters: US Commerce chief says nothing will stop metals tariffs, will add copper protections

Escribe: Reuters
Leer más

PwC: Ley de Protección de Datos Personales, recomendaciones para la adecuación al nuevo reglamento

Escribe: Comunicación Corporativa
Leer más

Te puede interesar

U.S. Chamber of Commerce: Chamber Submits Comments to USTR on Unfair Trade Practices

Reuters: US Commerce chief says nothing will stop metals tariffs, will add copper protections

U.S. Chamber of Commerce: Steep Tariffs Imposed, Then Partly Paused, Disrupting U.S. Commerce

Noticias relacionadas

GetAbstract: recomendaciones de lectura #102

Escribe: GetAbstract y Amcham Perú
Leer más

Reserva Federal de Estados Unidos mantiene tasas y recorta proyección de crecimiento de EEUU

Escribe: AmCham Perú
Leer más

BBVA Research ajusta al alza proyección de crecimiento para Perú de 2.7% a 3.1%

Escribe: AmCham Perú
Leer más