In 2022, EU and Mercosur trade in goods and services reached €159 billion, with mutual investments nearing €380 billion. To further support these deep economic ties, both Europe and Mercosur must work together to finalise their Free Trade Agreement. With 77 business associations from across the Atlantic, we are emphasising the agreement’s potential to boost trade, foster investment and promote sustainable development. Learn why ratifying the agreement can promote supply chain stability, enhance cooperation and growth between the two regions.
Taking steps towards ratifying the EU-Mercosur Free Trade Agreement

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Stressing the importance of open trade in Strasbourg
From Tuesday, 16 to Wednesday, 17 June, AmCham EU travelled to the European Parliament in Strasbourg, France for a series of meetings on EU trade and external affairs policy developments. The delegation engaged with Members of the European Parliament and political group advisers to share business perspectives on the future of the EU-US relationship. Discussions focused on the need to reset transatlantic trade and investment ties, strengthen Europe’s competitiveness and preserve open, rules-based markets. Members also highlighted the importance of avoiding tariffs, reducing regulatory complexity, deepening cooperation on economic security, critical supply chains and digital policy as well as ensuring that resilience measures remain proportionate, predictable and open to trusted partners.
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One year on from ‘Liberation Day’, the transatlantic economy still stands strong – but it needs stability
Authored by Malte Lohan, CEO, AmCham EU
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MC14: deep concern over e-commerce moratorium deadlock
The American Chamber of Commerce to the EU (AmCham EU) is deeply concerned by World Trade Organization members’ failure to reach agreement on the moratorium on E-Commerce at the 14th Ministerial Conference (MC14) in Cameroon. The absence of an agreement undermines legal certainty for businesses and consumers worldwide. This deadlock further underscores the need for significant WTO reform.
Since its introduction, the moratorium on customs duties on electronic transmissions has played a vital role in enabling the global digital economy by ensuring the smooth cross-border exchange of digital goods and services. In an increasingly digitalised global economy, predictability remains essential for companies of all sizes operating across borders.
WTO members must now renew efforts to re-instate the moratorium at the next General Council meeting as a matter of priority. Delivering such an outcome would strengthen the multilateral trading system and better reflect the realities of modern trade.
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