Khaleej Times

GM joins drive to warn on ill-effects of US tariffs

- David Shepardson

washington — General Motors warned that higher tariffs on imported vehicles under considerat­ion by the Trump administra­tion could cost jobs and lead to a “a smaller GM” while isolating US businesses from the global market.

The administra­tion in May launched an investigat­ion into whether imported vehicles pose a national security threat, and US President Donald Trump has repeatedly threatened to impose a 20 per cent vehicle import tariff.

The largest US automaker said in comments filed with the US Commerce Department that overly broad tariffs could “lead to a smaller GM, a reduced presence at home and abroad for this iconic American company, and risk less — not more — US jobs”.

Higher tariffs could also hike vehicle prices and reduce sales, GM said.

Its comments echoed those from two major US auto trade groups on Wednesday, when they warned that tariffs of up to 25 per cent on imported vehicles would cost hundreds of thousands of auto jobs, dramatical­ly raise prices on vehicles and threaten industry spending on self-driving cars.

Even if automakers opted not to pass on higher costs “this could still lead to less investment, fewer jobs and lower wages for our employees. The carryon effect of less investment and a smaller workforce could delay breakthrou­gh technologi­es,” GM said.

GM operates 47 US manufactur­ing facilities and employs about 110,000 people in the United States. It buys tens of billions of dollars worth of parts from US suppliers every year, and has invested over $22 billion in US manufactur­ing operations since 2009.

Still, 30 per cent of the vehicles GM sold on the US market in 2017 were manufactur­ed abroad, according to the Michigan-based Center for Automotive Research. Eighty-six per cent of those vehicles came from Canada and Mexico, while others came from Europe and China.

Detroit automakers Ford Motor and Fiat-Chrysler Automobile­s also import many of the vehicles they sell in the United States.

“The overbroad and steep applicatio­n of import tariffs on our trading partners risks isolating US businesses like GM from the global market that helps to preserve and grow our strength here at home,” GM said. —

 ?? AP ?? General Motors says higher tariffs could also hike vehicle prices and reduce sales. —
AP General Motors says higher tariffs could also hike vehicle prices and reduce sales. —

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