Jamieson Greer, the United States Trade Representative, has been at the center of several key trade developments in recent days. On Monday, December 22, he met with Indonesian Coordinating Economy Minister Airlangga Hartarto in Jakarta to finalize negotiations on the Agreement on Reciprocal Trade, or ART. According to The Jakarta Post, they resolved all substantive issues, paving the way for Presidents Donald Trump and Prabowo Subianto to sign the deal in January 2026. The pact grants exemptions for Indonesian natural resources like palm oil, tea, and coffee from United States tariffs, but excludes textiles, which face a 19 percent duty. Airlangga noted the agreement preserves Indonesia's policy freedom and boosts balanced economic gains.
Bloomberg reports Greer told lawmakers this month that over 1,500 stakeholders support reviewing the United States Mexico Canada Agreement, or USMCA, in 2026, though many seek improvements that could spark tough talks amid strained relations with Canada.
The Washington Examiner states Greer recently warned of retaliation against European companies over the European Union's Digital Services Act and Digital Markets Act, which he views as harming American tech firms like X, fined over 140 million dollars. He floated a Section 301 investigation and canceled a meeting with South Korean officials over their digital proposals, framing them as trade barriers.
Global trade experts, cited in Bloomberg, highlight Greer's noncommittal stance on 2026 tariffs, deferring to President Trump amid a pending Supreme Court case on reciprocal tariffs' legality.
These moves underscore Greer's push for fair access and enforcement in a shifting trade landscape.
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