Times Colonist

NAFTA rules will increase prices for new cars: study

- ALEXANDER PANETTA

WASHINGTON — New NAFTA rules could increase the cost of a car by hundreds or even thousands of dollars, act as a multibilli­on-dollar tax and ultimately hurt sales as consumers keep their wallets shut, a new study predicts.

The study by the Center for Automotive Research attempts to assess the impact of proposals under considerat­ion as the three North American countries huddle in a marathon negotiatin­g session in Washington.

Negotiator­s are refining a plan that would require that every car include more North American parts; use primarily North American steel; and favour production in high-wage jurisdicti­ons, meaning the U.S. and Canada.

The study calculates at least 46 vehicle types currently produced on the continent would fail to meet these new standards, a dramatic increase in the number of products that fail to comply with existing NAFTA rules.

The companies making these vehicles always have a choice: comply with the NAFTA rules, or pay the tariff, which is 2.5 per cent for a light vehicle in the U.S., 6.1 per cent in Canada.

The study offers a broad estimate, with a range of outcomes. It finds that 25 per cent to 87 per cent of vehicles currently sold in the U.S. would fail to meet the standard and would wind up paying a tariff.

”Tariffs [would] add at minimum a $2.1-billion US to $3.8-billion US tax on U.S. consumers,” said the study, released Thursday.

“The tariffs would add between $470 US and $2,200 US to the cost of these particular vehicles and the result would be an estimated loss of 60,000 to 150,000 annual U.S. light vehicle sales.”

The group behind the research is funded by the auto industry, government­s, unions and other organizati­ons. The study was commission­ed by Trade Leadership Coalition, an industryfu­nded group.

But its findings are consistent with the view of Jeff Rubin, a senior fellow at Canada’s Centre for Internatio­nal Governance Innovation and a former chief economist at CIBC World Markets. He said that under the current NAFTA many groups win: consumers with cheaper cars, car companies with higher profits and Mexican auto workers with higher salaries than Mexicans in other sectors.

The losers under the current NAFTA, he said, are auto workers in the U.S. and Canada, where employment has dropped and, Rubin said, the auto sector faces a long-term terminal decline. He’s unsure the new NAFTA rules will change that.

He said it’s a no-brainer for companies trying to decide whether to adjust practices to comply with the new rules. He figures compliance with NAFTA might add five per cent to the cost of a vehicle, versus the tariff of 2.5 per cent for light vehicles sold in the U.S.

“If I was a shareholde­r at [autoparts-maker] Magna, or GM, I know what I would be telling management to do — which is, instead of tripling wage costs [in Mexico], pay the tariff,” Rubin said. “Ultimately GM and Magna are going to do what’s in the best interest of their shareholde­rs. And right now the best interest would be keep the production in Mexico, pay the low wage rate and pay the 2.5 per cent tariff.“

As long as the tariff remains low, Rubin added that the new NAFTA will be “a paper tiger.”

However, it would be “a totally different ball game,” if the countries raise their tariff, he said, arguing it would make paying the higher cost of compliance the better alternativ­e and steer production back to the U.S. and Canada. ”It would be a total game-changer.” But under the current proposal, with no change to the tariff level, Rubin sees the new NAFTA as producing a 2.5 per cent added tax on cars and no improvemen­t in the lives of Canadian and American workers — a scenario that “isn’t going to bring a single job back to the U.S.”

 ??  ?? Ford Edge SUVs roll down a production line at the Ford Assembly Plant in Oakville, Ont.
Ford Edge SUVs roll down a production line at the Ford Assembly Plant in Oakville, Ont.

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