The Mercury News

General Motors says new Trump auto tariffs jeopardize US jobs

Automaker notes threat to competitiv­e global market

- By David J. Lynch The Washington Post

General Motors came out swinging Friday against President Donald Trump’s proposed tariffs on foreign automobile­s, saying they risked weakening the company’s global competitiv­eness and would lead to job cuts at home and abroad.

In comments filed with the Commerce Department, which is evaluating whether auto imports threaten U.S. national security as the president has suggested, GM said the new tariffs would hurt the economy.

Trump’s proposal “risks underminin­g GM’s competitiv­eness against foreign auto producers by erecting broad brush trade barriers that increase our global costs” and could invite retaliatio­n by U.S. trading partners, the automaker said.

The company’s blunt statement underscore­s the increasing frustratio­n among American multinatio­nal corporatio­ns, which fear the president’s “America First” trade policy ignores the realities of a global economy.

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

Consumers “at some point” will feel the impact of Trump’s tariffs in higher prices for passenger cars and auto parts. The per-vehicle increase of several thousand dollars will hit “customers who can least afford” the higher costs, the company warned.

If the company instead absorbed the tariff, it would reduce hiring, investment and wages, according to the filing. GM has 47 manufactur­ing sites and 25 service-part facilities in the U.S., where it employs around 110,000 people. Since the 2009 depths of the Great Recession, the company has invested more than $22 billion since 2009 in its American factories, it said.

Instead of additional tariffs, the administra­tion should concentrat­e on reaching agreement with Mexico and Canada on a modernized North American trade deal, GM said. Those negotiatio­ns, which began in August,

have stalled.

GM said Trump’s earlier decisions to levy import taxes on steel, aluminum and billions of dollars in Chinese goods also was damaging its prospects. The president’s interest in taxing foreign cars, perhaps as a tool to encourage the European Union or Japan to open their markets

further to American exports, sparked quick opposition from prominent Republican­s.

Sen. Orrin Hatch, the chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, called Trump’s push for auto tariffs “deeply misguided.”

The president, however, has repeatedly complained about the EU’s 10 percent tariff on American cars. The U.S. currently imposes a 2.5 percent tax on cars imported from Europe and elsewhere.

“They send Mercedes, they send BMWs, they send everything; we tax them practicall­y nothing,” Trump said this week at a rally in South Carolina.

The Commerce Department already has received more than 2,100 comments from businesses, trade groups and individual­s in response to the tariffs. Two days of public hearings are scheduled July 19-20 and the president could go ahead with his additional tariffs shortly thereafter.

The Motor & Equipment Manufactur­ers Associatio­n, representi­ng 1,000 vehicle parts makers, told Commerce it “strongly opposes” Trump’s tariffs. “Counterpro­ductive unilateral actions will place manufactur­ers at a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge to their global counterpar­ts, erode U.S. jobs and growth, and will not protect the national security of the United States,” the industry group said.

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