Economy

EU Brainstorms Way to Blame Russia for Bloc's Own Crushing Tariffs Against Ukraine

2023 witnessed the limits of the EU 'solidarity' with Kiev amid the ongoing NATO proxy war against Russia, with several Eastern European countries placing severe restrictions on Ukrainian agricultural exports in a bid to protect local farmers. The dispute escalated after Poland’s president compared Ukraine to a “drowning man.”
Sputnik
The European Commission’s chief of agriculture policy has come up with a novel argument for putting bloc-wide restrictions on the export of Ukrainian food products to EU countries, claiming that doing so would only benefit Russia.
“Trade liberalization would benefit Russia by helping Moscow displace Kiev’s exports, away from regions like Africa and Asia toward the EU, potentially causing destabilizing effects,” Politico wrote, paraphrasing a letter by Agriculture Commissioner Janusz Wojciechowski explaining why bloc-wide import duties on Ukrainian foodstuffs should be restored.
Wojciechowski’s stance reportedly stands at odds with his fellow Commission members, including President Ursula von der Leyen, who are mulling slash import duties on Ukrainian products until June 2025, presumably to help prop up Ukraine’s economy as Western aid to Kiev slows to a trickle.
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In reality, the Polish-born EC agriculture chief’s concerns appear to stem from fears that opening the floodgates to Ukrainian food imports would lead Ukrainian producers to flood the market with grain, meat and other food products too cheap for local producers to compete against.
Poland, Hungary, and Slovakia took flak from both Brussels and Kiev last year after imposing unilateral bans on Ukrainian grain imports after the European Commission lifted bloc-wide restrictions.
In the chaos that followed, Kiev announced that it would file a complaint against the three countries at the World Trade Organization over unfair trade practices. Polish President Andrzej Duda responded by calling Ukraine a “dangerous drowning man” that threatens to “drag” Europe down with it into oblivion.
Ukrainian authorities ended up putting the complaint on “pause” while searching for a compromise. Polish authorities called the suspension “a good step but not enough,” saying it should be withdrawn altogether.
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Eastern European countries’ efforts to keep Ukrainian foodstuffs out have been complemented by Polish truckers and farmers, who began blockading checkpoints along the Ukrainian border late last year in protest over the government’s lack of action to protect local workers, causing kilometers-long lines of trucks to pile up on the Ukrainian side of the frontier. In addition to competition concerns from farmers, Polish truckers expressed discontent over the fact that their Ukrainian counterparts are exempted from the need to obtain permits for border crossings, making their services cheaper than those of Polish haulers.
Commissioner Janusz Wojciechowski’s proposal to put EU-wide restrictions on Ukrainian agriculture comes amid growing desperation in Kiev about where to get the money to keep the state from collapsing in the new year as US lawmakers continue to wrangle over a proposed $61 billion aid package, with NATO countries’ collective assistance tanking by nearly 90 percent since last June.
US business media warned over the weekend that Kiev could turn to money-printing to plug gaps in the budget if the shortfall in foreign assistance continues, resulting in hyperinflation. Ukraine’s deputy prime minister warned last month that salary and pension payment delays would be imminent if Western support was not immediately forthcoming.
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