EU industry chief pushes ‘buy European’ in response to Donald Trump

https://www.ft.com/content/cd3b82a6-49dd-431e-98aa-91ce46d2aa2c

Posted by Themetalin

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  1. Brussels wants EU governments to exclude foreign bidders in public procurement tenders and “buy European”, as the bloc attempts to reassert itself despite the impact of US President Donald Trump’s trade war.

    Stéphane Séjourné, the EU’s executive vice-president for industry and the internal market, on Wednesday presented a plan harmonising rules across the EU and cutting down barriers in the bloc’s internal market.

    One key element is introducing European preferences in upcoming changes to the EU’s public procurement rules, which Séjourné told the Financial Times was a “Buy European Act”.

    EU governments could be allowed to bar foreign companies from bidding for government contracts for goods and services, if proposed changes to the public procurement rules are agreed next year. Current EU and World Trade Organization regulations prohibit favouring local suppliers.

    The move represents a major shift in the EU’s attitude to open procurement and adhering to international rules. While it would protect strategic sectors from cheaper competitors from China and elsewhere, it could open it up to potential challenges from other countries at the WTO.

    Séjourné, a former French foreign minister and close ally of President Emmanuel Macron, has consistently pushed for Europe to be more autonomous. He sees favouring European bidders in public procurement as a “first step”.

    As well as the trade tensions with the US, concerns over privacy and data access have prompted calls for Europe’s tech sector to be more self-sufficient. The EU is also considering “buy European” elements in upcoming legislation on the cloud market, which is currently dominated by US companies such as Amazon, Microsoft and Google.

    European companies have complained that they are strangled by the EU’s ambitious climate agenda, undercut by cheaper Chinese rivals and now are suffering the impact of Trump’s aggressive trade policy.

    But Séjourné argued that Europe was in an “almost ideal” position, “in the sense of the trade-off that you can do one with the other, since the Americans remain our partners and the Chinese want to strengthen the partnership”. It was possible to “make progress on many big difficulties with the Chinese in many sectors,” he said.

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