European Union (EU) foreign ministers voted unanimously in Brussels Monday to apply US$200 million in tariffs, starting in March 2004 against US goods ranging from steel to cosmetics.
The World Trade Organization (WTO) last year authorized 100 percent tariffs on up to US$4 billion of goods in retaliation for a US tax break called Foreign Sales Corporation (FSC) that benefited US exporters such as Boeing and Microsoft.
The EU, however, has been reluctant to impose the sanction, in a bid to avoid a trade war with one of its most important allies.
Earlier last month, EU's executive European Commission (EC) made a proposal asking for a gradual imposition of tariffs as from March 2004 at the level of 5 percent, followed by automatic, monthly increases of 1 percent up to a ceiling of 17 percent to be reached in March 2005.
Targeted US products range from orange juice to turbines manufactured in states key to US President George W. Bush's re-election bid next year.
The sanctions would be removed as long as the US congress repeals the FSC, the EU said.
(Xinhua News Agency December 9, 2003)
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