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Brazil suggests steel quotas and calls for dialogue on trade with the US

Brazil's Vice-President Geraldo Alckmin called on Wednesday for "caution", and said that the South American nation would seek dialogue after President Donald Trump decided to impose 25% tariffs on steel and aluminium imports.

Alckmin told reporters in Brasilia that Brazil is open to dialogue, and will reach out to Trump's administration. He suggested that quotas might be an alternative.

Alckmin said that the U.S. trades with Brazil in a surplus, which means that the country's biggest economy is "not the issue".

Trump, who was sworn in last month to his second term non-consecutive, is the first target.

Steel and Aluminum

Tariffs will be imposed in 2018 as a result of a national security law from the Cold War.

He later exempted several countries, including Canada and Australia, as well as Brazil, South Korea, and Argentina, from duty-free quotas based on pretariff volumes.

In the past, quotas would be set when tariffs increased. This is a clever mechanism," said Alckmin who is also the Minister of Development, Industry and Trade for President Luiz inacio Lula da S Silva.

Since 2008, the United States has had a surplus in bilateral trade with Brazil. This surplus reached 253 million dollars last year.

Brazilian

Steelmakers Lobby Group

Aco Brasil said on Tuesday that it was surprised at Trump's tariffs, and that the measure would not be beneficial to either country.

(source: Reuters)