For Europe’s automotive giants, the new US-EU trade agreement is not yet a done deal, but a conditional promise whose fulfillment rests entirely on the speed of Brussels bureaucracy. The carrot is a reduction of the punishing 27.5% US import tariff to 15%, but the stick is that this will only happen after the EU introduces its own tariff-slashing legislation.
This arrangement turns the legislative process of the European Union into a high-stakes race against time. Every day of delay directly impacts the bottom line of major companies in Germany, Italy, and France, which collectively form the backbone of the European industrial economy. Germany, as the top EU exporter to the US with €161 billion in trade, has the most to lose.
The pressure from the auto industry on the European Commission will be immense. They will push for the swiftest possible tabling of a bill to meet the US condition. Washington has fueled this urgency by confirming that the trigger for its tariff cut is merely the introduction, not the final passage, of the EU law.
However, the EU’s legislative machinery is designed to be deliberative, not reactive. It must account for the dissenting voices of member states and the anger of other industries, like wine and spirits, that were left out of the deal. This internal conflict will be the ultimate test of whether the bloc can act decisively to secure the benefits of this contentious agreement.
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