Boston Herald

Auto tariffs could drive down economy

- By STEPHEN MOORE Stephen Moore is a senior fellow at The Heritage Foundation.

Love him or hate him, you’ve got to hand it to Donald Trump. His trade and tariff strategy — risky as it is — seems to be working. The master negotiator is hammering out agreements — first with the Europeans and now with Mexico — that are better deals for American firms and workers.

The threat of tariffs is leading to lower tariffs. The irony is that if President Trump keeps winning this way, he may actually end up being one of the champions of freer trade.

But Trump is still holding firm on his call for 20-25 percent auto tariffs on all imported auto parts and cars. These are said by the White House to be necessary for national security reasons, though this argument that the Nissans and BMWs on the roads are a national defense concern seems more than a little flimsy. This tariff is about saving American auto jobs, and though that’s a defensible goal, will it work?

History suggests that auto trade restrictio­ns almost never deliver. Back in the late 1970s and early ’80s, the United States put trade restrictio­ns on the surging Japanese auto companies — including Honda and Toyota. A landmark study by Robert Crandall of the Brookings Institutio­n found that from 1982 to 1985, those trade barriers led to a “$10-$15 billion welfare loss absorbed by U.S. consumers.”

What is very different today from even the failed trade protection­ist policies of the 1970s, ’80s and 2000s is that global supply chains make it increasing­ly difficult to determine what country made the car. The steel in a Ford truck may have come from Canada, with the parts coming from Singapore and the electronic gadgetry from Germany, and some of the assembly may have been done in Mexico.

But the Trump tariffs would be imposed not just on imported cars but on the auto parts, which would make manufactur­ing the car in the United States clearly more expensive.

With $50 billion of annual sales abroad, America is the third-largest exporter of cars, behind Germany and Japan. This means America might end up losing many auto jobs because of the tariffs. This is one of the reasons most American auto companies oppose these tariffs that are supposed to “protect” them from foreign competitio­n.

The employment impact of the proposed 25 percent tariff could add significan­tly to the cost of cars made in America and result in a 2 percent drop in direct auto-sector employment, rising to 5 percent and a total job loss of over 600,000 after expected in-kind retaliatio­n by trading partners, according to an analysis by the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics. This is the opposite result of what Trump intends.

That’s only the impact on manufactur­ers. The Center for Automotive Research found the 25 percent tariff would slash dealer employment by more than 100,000 — an average of seven employees per dealership.

One study by the Trade Partnershi­p predicted that tariffs could (in the absence of retaliatio­n) boost employment in the auto sector by 92,000 auto workers. But it also found that the tariffs would shave 0.1 percent off overall gross domestic product and destroy 250,000 jobs in the rest of the economy. If you are counting, that means a net loss of 158,000 American jobs.

The tariffs would raise the cost of buying a new car by as much as $2,000, which would be a big dent out of family incomes. To his credit, Trump has won trade concession­s from the Europeans and now the Mexicans with the threat of tariffs on cars and auto parts. This is a case where the bark of Trump’s tariffs is a more effective strategy than the bite.

But actually implementi­ng the tariffs would be negative. History proves that the best way to boost the U.S. auto industry is not with protection­ism but by creating a level playing field. The booming economy is visible proof that this Trumpian strategy is working with every other American industry, from potato chips to computer chips, from bourbon to blue jeans. Why not cars?

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States