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Trump auto tariffs: President slaps 25% duties on car imports to US

 


While tariffs on imported cars may have some negative impacts, there are potential positive effects for the American people and the U.S. auto industry as well. Here are a few:

1. Increased Domestic Manufacturing: The primary goal of the tariffs is to encourage carmakers to build more factories in the U.S. By making it more expensive to import vehicles, companies may invest more in U.S. production facilities, potentially creating more American jobs in the auto manufacturing sector.

2. Job Creation: If more car factories are built in the U.S., it could lead to an increase in manufacturing jobs, including assembly line positions, engineering, and management roles. This would benefit the American workforce and potentially reduce unemployment in the manufacturing sector.

3. Strengthening the U.S. Auto Industry: With more production happening on American soil, the U.S. auto industry could become more self-reliant and less dependent on foreign imports. This might make the industry more resilient to global supply chain disruptions, such as those seen during the pandemic.

4. Potential Innovation and Investment: With an increased focus on domestic production, automakers might invest in new technologies and innovations, particularly in electric vehicles (EVs) and advanced manufacturing processes. This could help the U.S. lead in emerging automotive sectors, potentially benefiting consumers with more options in the future.

5. National Security: From a strategic perspective, reducing reliance on foreign-made cars and parts might be seen as a way to strengthen national security. It ensures that key industries, like the auto industry, are less vulnerable to foreign influence or trade conflicts.

6. Long-Term Economic Growth: If the tariffs successfully lead to more manufacturing jobs and U.S.-based production, it could help stimulate economic growth. More jobs could lead to increased consumer spending, potentially benefiting other sectors of the economy as well.

While the tariffs are likely to increase car prices in the short term, these positive effects might create long-term benefits for the American people and the U.S. auto industry.

President Donald Trump said Wednesday he was placing 25% tariffs on auto imports, a move the White House claims would foster domestic manufacturing but could also put a financial squeeze on automakers that depend on global supply chains.

“This will continue to spur growth,” Trump told reporters. “We’ll effectively be charging a 25% tariff.”

The tariffs, which the White House expects to raise $100 billion in revenue annually, could be complicated as even U.S. automakers source their components worldwide. The tax hike starting in April means automakers could face higher costs and lower sales. However, Trump argues that the tariffs will lead to more factories opening in the United States and the end of what he judges to be a “ridiculous” supply chain in which auto parts and finished vehicles are manufactured across the United States, Canada, and Mexico.

To underscore his seriousness about the tariffs directive he signed, Trump said, “This is permanent.”

Shares in General Motors fell roughly 3% in Wednesday trading. Ford’s stock was up slightly. Shares in Stellantis, the owner of Jeep and Chrysler, dropped nearly 3.6%.

Power transmission towers line a street in Redondo Beach, Calif., Wednesday, Sept. 7, 2022. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File)

Trump has long said that tariffs against auto imports would be a defining policy of his presidency, betting that the costs created by the taxes would cause more production to relocate to the United States while helping narrow the budget deficit. But U.S. and foreign automakers have plants around the world to accommodate global sales while maintaining competitive prices — and it could take years for companies to design, build and open the new factories that Trump is promising.

“We’re looking at much higher vehicle prices,” said economist Mary Lovely, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. “We’re going to see reduced choice. ... These kinds of taxes fall more heavily on the middle and working class.’’

She said more households will be priced out of the new car market, where prices already average about $49,000, and will have to hang on to aging vehicles.

The tariffs on autos would start being collected on April 3, Trump said. If the taxes are fully passed onto consumers, the average auto price on an imported vehicle could jump by $12,500, a sum that could feed into overall inflation. Trump was voted back into the White House last year because voters believed he could bring down prices.

Foreign leaders were quick to criticize the tariffs, a sign that Trump could be intensifying a broader trade war that could damage growth worldwide.

“This is a very direct attack,” Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said. “We will defend our workers. We will defend our companies. We will defend our country.”

In Brussels, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen expressed regret at the U.S. decision to target auto exports from Europe and vowed that the bloc would protect consumers and businesses.

“Tariffs are taxes — bad for businesses, worse for consumers equally in the U.S. and the European Union,” she said in a statement, adding that the EU’s executive branch would assess the impact of the move, as well as other U.S. tariffs planned for coming days.

As Trump announced the new tariffs, he indicated that he would like to provide a new incentive to help car buyers by allowing them to deduct from their federal income taxes the interest paid on auto loans, so long as their vehicles were made in America. That deduction would eat into some of the revenues that could be generated by the tariffs.

The new tariffs would apply to both finished autos and parts used in the vehicles, according to a White House official who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the taxes on a call with reporters. The tariffs would be on top of any existing taxes and were legally based on a 2019 Commerce Department investigation that occurred during Trump’s first term on national security grounds.

For autos and parts under the USMCA trade pact applying to the United States, Mexico and Canada, the 25% tariffs would only apply to non-U.S. content.

The administration is reasoning that there is excess capacity at U.S. automakers that will enable them to ramp up production to avoid the tariffs by manufacturing more domestically, with the official noting that automakers have known since the Trump campaign that tariffs were coming.

The auto tariffs are part of a broader reshaping of global relations by Trump, who plans to impose what he calls “reciprocal” taxes on April 2 that would match the tariffs, sales taxes charged by other nations.

Trump has already placed a 20% import tax on all imports from China for its role in the production of fentanyl. He similarly placed 25% tariffs on Mexico and Canada, with a lower 10% tax on Canadian energy products. Parts of the Mexico and Canada tariffs have been suspended, including the taxes on autos, after automakers objected and Trump responded by giving them a 30-day reprieve that is set to expire in April.

The president has also imposed 25% tariffs on all steel and aluminum imports, removing the exemptions from his earlier 2018 taxes on the metals. He also plans tariffs on computer chips, pharmaceutical drugs, lumber, and copper.

His taxes risk igniting a broader global trade war with escalating retaliations that could crush global trade, potentially hurting economic growth while raising prices for families and businesses as some of the costs of the taxes get passed along by importers. When the European Union retaliated with plans for a 50% tariff on U.S. spirits, Trump responded by planning a 200% tax on alcoholic beverages from the EU.

Trump also intends to place a 25% tariff on countries that import oil from Venezuela, even though the United States also imports oil from that nation.

Trump’s aides maintain that the tariffs on Canada and Mexico are about stopping illegal immigration and drug smuggling. But the administration also wants to use the tariff revenues to lower the budget deficit and assert America’s preeminence as the world’s largest economy.

The president on Monday cited plans by South Korean automaker Hyundai to build a $5.8 billion steel plant in Louisiana as evidence that tariffs would bring back manufacturing jobs.

Slightly more than 1 million people are employed domestically in the manufacturing of motor vehicles and parts, about 320,000 fewer than in 2000, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. An additional 2.1 million people work at auto and parts dealerships.

The United States last year imported nearly 8 million cars and light trucks worth $244 billion. Mexico, Japan and South Korea were the top sources of foreign vehicles. Imports of auto parts came to more than $197 billion, led by Mexico, Canada and China, according to the Commerce Department.

U.S. automakers and their global rivals were rocked on Wednesday by President Donald Trump's announcement that he would impose 25% tariffs on all vehicles and foreign-made auto parts imported into the United States.
The new levies, if kept for an extended period, could add thousands of dollars to the cost of an average U.S. vehicle purchase and impede car production across North America.
That will be because of the intertwined manufacturing operations developed by car makers across Canada, Mexico, and the United States over the last three decades.
Nearly half of all cars sold in the U.S. last year were imported, research firm GlobalData says.
In response to the news, shares of General Motors (GM.N),which opens a new tab, slumped 8% in after-market trading. Shares in Ford (F.N), opens new tab and U.S.-traded shares of Chrysler-parent Stellantis (STLAM.MI), opens new tab fell about 4.5% each.
In Asia, shares in Toyota Motor (7203.T), opens new tab, Honda Motor (7267.T), opens new tab, and Hyundai Motor (005380.KS), opens new tab all fell between 3% and 4%.
Shares in Tesla (TSLA.O), opens new tab, which makes all the cars sold in the United States locally but with some imported parts, were down 1.3%.
Trump said the duties announced on Wednesday could be a net neutral or even good for Tesla, adding that its CEO, and his close ally, Elon Musk, did not advise him regarding auto tariffs.
In a post on X following the news, Musk said the tariffs would also affect Tesla.
"This will affect the price of parts in Tesla cars that come from other countries," he wrote in another post on X. "The cost impact is not trivial."
The companies did not immediately return emails seeking comment.
Trump's tariffs and threats to impose them have sowed uncertainty in businesses and roiled global markets since he returned to the White House in January.
On Wednesday, Trump reiterated that he expected the auto tariffs to prompt automakers to boost investment in the United States, instead of Canada or Mexico.
Autos Drive America, a group representing major foreign automakers such as Honda, Hyundai, Toyota and Volkswagen (VOWG.DE), opens new tab, said the "tariffs imposed today will make it more expensive to produce and sell cars in the United States, ultimately leading to higher prices, fewer options for consumers, and fewer manufacturing jobs in the U.S."
Automakers in North America have largely enjoyed free trade status since 1994. Trump's 2020 U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) imposed new rules designed to spur regional content production.
After clamping tariffs of 25% on Mexico and Canada in early March, Trump allowed a one-month reprieve for vehicles produced in compliance with the terms of his USMCA, which benefited American companies.
The new rules do not extend that reprieve.
"Companies that have invested hundreds of millions and billions of dollars on plants in Canada and Mexico will likely see their profits cut dramatically over the next few quarters, if not into a couple of years," said Sam Fiorani, analyst at AutoForecast Solutions.
"We're going to look at adjusting our sales and production forecasts because this will throw everything into chaos."
The White House said that 25% tariffs on automotive parts imported to the U.S. would take effect no later than May 3, taxing key items such as engines, transmissions, powertrain parts, and electrical components.
Importers of automobiles under the USMCA will get the chance to certify their U.S. content so that only non-U.S. content is taxed, the White House said.
Before the unveiling of the new tariffs, Cox Automotive, an automotive services provider, predicted they would add $3,000 to the cost of a U.S.-made vehicle and $6,000 to vehicles made in Canada or Mexico, without exemptions.
If tariffs go through, by mid-April, Cox expects disruption to "virtually all" North American vehicle output, leading to 20,000 fewer vehicles a day, or a hit of about 30% to production.
The United Auto Workers union, which represents factory workers at Big Three Detroit automakers, praised Trump's action.
"With these tariffs, thousands of good-paying blue-collar auto jobs could be brought back to working-class communities across the United States within a matter of months, simply by adding additional shifts or lines in several underutilized auto plants," UAW President Shawn Fain said in a statement.
 Canada will soon respond to new tariffs on imported vehicles announced by U.S. President Donald Trump and could impose retaliatory measures against the United States, Prime Minister Mark Carney said on Wednesday.
Carney said Trump's move was "a direct attack" and told reporters he would be convening a high-level cabinet meeting on Thursday to decide on a response.
"We will defend our workers, we will defend our companies, we will defend our country, and we will defend it together," he said in Kitchener, Ontario.
The tariffs look set to damage the highly integrated North American auto industry.
Canada has already announced a package of retaliatory tariffs totaling C$155 billion that it said would be imposed in stages depending on what Trump does.
Item 1 of 2 Canada's Prime Minister Mark Carney speaks in response to tariffs announced by U.S. President Donald Trump, in Kitchener, Ontario, Canada March 26, 2025. REUTERS/Blair Gable
Asked when Canada would react, Carney said: "It will happen soon ... we have options. We can introduce retaliatory tariffs." He did not give details.
Carney, who has already mused about non-tariff measures such as levying export duties on commodity exports to the United States, said it would be appropriate to speak to Trump soon. The two men have not spoken since Carney was sworn in as prime minister earlier this month.
Carney said he had spoken to Ontario Premier Doug Ford, who earlier told reporters that "we're going to make sure that we inflict as much pain as possible to the American people without inflicting pain on the Canadian population".
Ford told reporters he would soon be speaking to the other nine provinces on a coordinated response.
"We have two options here - we either roll over as a country and he runs us over 15 times and gets what he wants, or we feel a little bit of pain and fight like we have never fought before. I prefer the latter - I believe in fighting," he said.
Ontario, Canada's most populous province, is the home of the domestic auto industry.
U.S. President Donald Trump's new tariffs of 25% on automotive imports will rely on a 2019 national security investigation into auto imports that Trump's first administration conducted, according to a photo of his signed proclamation seen by Reuters.
The proclamation invokes Section 232 of the Trade Act of 1962. The 2019 investigation found that auto imports impair U.S. national security, but at the time, Trump did not take action to impose tariffs.

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