Business World

Harley-Davidson is an early casualty of trade war

- By The Bloomberg Editors

IN A speech to a joint session of Congress shortly after his inaugurati­on, President Donald Trump praised Harley-Davidson, the storied motorcycle manufactur­er, as a great American company — the kind he most wanted to see succeed. Less than two years later, he is threatenin­g to punish the firm for doing its best to survive his policies.

This absurd turn of events is no accident. It’s the logical consequenc­e of Trump’s entirely illogical approach to trade.

The mistakes began with the president’s tariffs on steel and aluminum. These rested on a patently false justificat­ion: that excessive imports of those metals threatened national security. The tariffs wounded HarleyDavi­dson, and many other similarly situated US firms, in two ways: They raised the price of imported inputs, and they provoked US trade partners to retaliate.

The European Union has announced tariffs on Harley’s US- made products, rendering them uncompetit­ive in EU markets. The company has said it will therefore move more of its production bound for Europe offshore. An embarrasse­d Trump is accusing the firm of cowardice and threatenin­g that Harley “will be taxed like never before.”

Moving production abroad to remain competitiv­e was a well-establishe­d trend at Harley and many other US companies before Trump’s tariffs. But the trade war the president thinks he can win certainly won’t help keep Harley’s American workers employed. The administra­tion is looking next at tariffs on imports of European cars. If they go forward, expect further retaliatio­n — and a worsening, lose-lose cycle of shrinking trade, diminished US competitiv­eness, disrupted supply chains and ruined investment plans. US workers and consumers won’t be spared.

Harley-Davidson’s predicamen­t has been especially awkward for a president who wanted to associate himself with the firm and its customers — but bear in mind it’s just one company. Trump’s misguided approach to trade will put many other US producers, famous and not so famous, in exactly the same quandary. The more the president escalates this fight, the more damage he is bound to do.

The president ought to stop his trade- war nonsense before it goes any further — preferably before he finds himself applying sanctions to the very companies he meant to champion.

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