Key Points

Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum has strongly criticized recent US tariff increases on steel and aluminum imports as economically unjustified. She argues that the 50% tariff lacks legal basis, especially given Mexico's trade partnership with the United States. Sheinbaum is preparing potential countermeasures while simultaneously seeking diplomatic negotiations to resolve the dispute. Her primary concern remains protecting Mexican industrial jobs and maintaining fair trade relations.

Key Points: Sheinbaum Blasts US Steel Tariffs as Unfair Trade Barrier

  • Mexico claims US tariffs violate free trade agreement principles
  • Tariff increases from 25% to 50% threaten bilateral economic relations
  • Sheinbaum seeks industry protection and job preservation
  • Negotiations with US authorities ongoing
2 min read

Mexican President calls US tariffs on steel, aluminum 'unfair'

Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum challenges US steel tariff hikes, arguing economic impact and lack of legal justification

"It is not a matter of revenge... it's a matter of protection - Claudia Sheinbaum"

Mexico City, June 5

Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum on Wednesday described the latest US tariff hikes on steel and aluminium imports, which doubled from 25 per cent to 50 per cent, as "unfair," "unsustainable," and lacking any "legal basis."

At her daily morning press conference, Sheinbaum said the measure, which applies to all countries except the United Kingdom, is unfair to Mexico because "Mexico imports more steel and aluminium than it exports."

Usually, "a tariff is imposed when there is a deficit," said Sheinbaum, but "we import more steel" so it is "unfair."

In addition, Mexico and the United States are partners in a free trade agreement, so from the Mexican government's perspective, the tariff "has no legal basis."

According to Washington, however, the tariff responds more to national security concerns than trade, noted the president, adding it is still unfair to apply it to Mexico, reports Xinhua news agency.

"It is being considered for reasons of US national security, and just yesterday, the White House spokesperson said there is very good collaboration on all fronts with Mexico, including the security issue. So, we don't believe it is justified," she said.

Finally, she added, the tariff will prove unsustainable "because just as ... there are many auto parts that cross from one side of the border to the other, the same occurs with steel."

Sheinbaum said she would meet with industry leaders during the day to present strategies, and her economy secretary, Marcelo Ebrard, was preparing negotiations with US authorities this week in anticipation of an agreement.

"Fifty per cent tariffs represent a significant impact on the steel and aluminium industry; 25 per cent already represented problems," she said.

With no agreement, her administration will announce what measures it will take next week, said Sheinbaum, adding it is not about "an eye for an eye," but about supporting the industry and the jobs it creates, which are "very important."

"We hope to reach an agreement. If we don't, then we will also announce some measures ... it's not a matter of revenge ... it's a matter of protection," the Mexican president said.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rajesh K.
The US always plays these economic games with its neighbors. We've seen similar tactics with China too. Mexico has every right to stand up for its industries. Hope they find a diplomatic solution soon. 🇮🇳🤝🇲🇽
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Priya M.
Interesting how the US cites "national security" for everything these days. First it was our steel exports, now Mexico's. When will they realize trade wars hurt everyone in the long run?
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Arjun S.
Mexico should consider diversifying its trade partners. The US market is important but overdependence on any single country is risky. Maybe they can look eastwards - India would welcome stronger trade ties!
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Sunita R.
I appreciate President Sheinbaum's balanced approach - standing firm but not being confrontational. This is how diplomacy should work. India could learn from this when dealing with our own trade disputes.
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Vikram J.
The double standards are clear - UK gets exemption while Mexico faces 50% tariff. Shows how trade policies are often political rather than economic. Hope Mexico finds a way to counter this.
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Neha P.
This reminds me of when the US suddenly raised tariffs on Indian steel. We should stand in solidarity with Mexico - developing nations need to support each other against such unfair trade practices.

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