US and EU near deadline on $11.5 billion tariffs in long-running aircraft dispute
BRUSSELS, June 11 (Reuters) - The United States and the European Union have yet to โdecide whether to continue suspending or to reimpose tariffs โon $11.5 billion of goods in a decades-long dispute over aircraft subsidies โwith just days to go before their truce expires. The two
BRUSSELS, June 11 (Reuters) - The United States and the European Union have yet to โdecide whether to continue suspending or to reimpose tariffs โon $11.5 billion of goods in a decades-long dispute over aircraft subsidies โwith just days to go before their truce expires.
The two sides in 2004 lodged parallel cases at the World Trade Organization over subsidies for U.S. plane maker Boeing and โEuropean rival Airbus, โ accusing each other of unfair competition.
The WTO in 2019 authorised the United States to impose โ tariffs on $7.5 billion of EU goods, such as cheese, in the case against Airbus. A year later, it gave โthe EU โthe right to respond with โcountermeasures on $4 billion of โU.S. imports, including tobacco and spirits. On June 15, 2021, both sides agreed to suspend these tariffs for five years.
A European Commission spokesperson said on Thursday that discussions were ongoing to extend the suspension.
The two sides said โin 2021 they aimed to work โon an overarching agreement on โsubsidies for large aircraft โand to counter investments in aircraft by "non-market โactors," meaning China. They said โthen they expected โthe dispute would be resolved within five years.
Instead, tariff tensions have risen, with the European Union facing โfees on most โof its exports to the United States, although โaircraft and aircraft parts are excluded.

