Oman Daily Observer

Foreign carmakers face questions in Trump era

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Despite the recent “America First” scoldings of President Donald Trump, foreign automakers have helped transform the economy of the Deep South in the past three decades. But they now face new challenges amid threats of trade wars and the rising influence of Silicon Valley in the auto industry. In a region of the United States more often identified with the legacy of racism and evangelica­l Christiani­ty, German and Asian cafes today dot the landscape in Alabama, where Mercedes-Benz, Honda, Hyundai-Kia and Toyota all have plants.

“Lives are being changed,” said Republican Senator Bob Corker of Tennessee, where Volkswagen opened a plant in 2011 that now employs more than 3,200 people.

Veronica Curtis was one of the first 700 people hired when Mercedes started production at its Tuscaloosa, Alabama plant in 1997, joining just five days after giving birth. “I’ve never built a car, I didn’t know anything about cars,” Curtis said.

But 20 years later, Curtis, who is African-American, is a group leader for a team of 60.

“My husband wanted more, and I did too,” she said, recounting trips for the company to India, South Africa and Europe. “If you are good enough, you can move on and I kept moving on.”

Such is the influence of the foreign car manufactur­ers, that colleges in the South have adjusted their curricula to prepare students for jobs in this sector, including the University of Alabama, which trains engineers for the auto industry.

“We work with schools in our state to make sure that they are working with and they are listening to the companies,” said Alabama Commerce Secretary Greg Canfield. “It takes a lot of coordinati­on.”

Just about every major foreign brand that sells cars in America has a factory in the southeast. The industry, including auto suppliers, employs 279,620 in the region, about one-third of the sector’s nationwide workforce, according to 2015 US Labour Department data.

Battered by the decline of the coal and textile industries, states such as Kentucky, Mississipp­i, Tennessee, Alabama, South Carolina and Georgia started to target automakers at the end of the 1980s with an array of enticement­s including subsidies and deregulato­ry measures.

Former Kentucky governor Martha Layne Collins was the first to employ incentives with Toyota, said consultant Maryann Keller, whose husband had represente­d Toyota in the talks.

Collins “was roundly criticized,” Keller said, but “By today’s standards, she gave very little.”

Canfield said, “The biggest concern for companies is that the regulatory environmen­t is friendly. We want to make sure that we offer the lowest tax rate... that we have the right tax reform.”

But South Carolina also modernized its road and rail infrastruc­ture so that BMW could export cars built at its Spartanbur­g factory through the port of Charleston, 200 miles away.

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