Vancouver Sun

U.S. car-import probe said to be advancing as Trump mulls tariffs

President has signalled impatience, frustratio­n with trading partners

- JENNIFER JACOBS AND JENNY LEONARD

WASHINGTON The White House is circulatin­g a draft report by the U.S. Commerce Department over whether to impose tariffs on automobile imports to protect national security, three people familiar with the matter said.

President Donald Trump is scheduled to meet with senior members of his trade team on Tuesday to discuss how to proceed on the potential tariffs, two of the people said. Speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberati­ons, they didn’t give any insight into Commerce’s conclusion­s.

On a day when U.S. stocks closed lower, shares of General Motors Co. erased an advance following news of the auto-tariff report and ended little changed. Ford Motor Co. trimmed its gains while the U.S.-listed shares of Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s NV fell three per cent.

The department in May launched an investigat­ion into the national-security impact of car imports under section 232 of the 1962 Trade Expansion Act, the same provision Trump used to justify steel and aluminum tariffs earlier this year.

The probe covers imports of automobile­s, including SUVs, vans and light trucks, as well as auto parts. Commerce has until February to report its findings to the president, who has final say on any tariffs.

A Commerce spokesman declined to comment on an ongoing investigat­ion, while White House communicat­ions staff had no immediate response.

At public hearings in July, companies and government­s from Europe to Asia warned that duties on car imports would hurt the U.S. economy, disrupt the global automotive industry, and widen the rift between America and its closest allies.

There’s no indication when Trump will make a final decision on autos tariffs but he has repeatedly signalled that he’s getting impatient with his trading partners, including the European Union and Japan. Trump has threatened a 25-per-cent tariff on imported cars.

European Commission trade chief Cecilia Malmstrom is coming to Washington this week to meet with U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer to continue explorator­y talks for a future free trade agreement. Formal trade talks are set to begin in mid-January.

EU Commission President JeanClaude Juncker signalled Monday that Europe’s avoidance of American car tariffs might last only until year-end, the latest indication of the fragility of the trans-Atlantic truce reached in the summer.

At a press conference last week, Trump expressed his frustratio­n about what he sees as an unfair auto trading relationsh­ip with Japan. “Say hello to Shinzo,” Trump told a Japanese reporter, referring to Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. “I’m sure he’s happy about tariffs on his cars.”

“I tell him all the time that Japan does not treat the United States fairly on trade. They send in millions of cars at a very low tax. They don’t take our cars. And if they do, they have a massive tax on their cars,” Trump added.

South Korea also has still not gotten assurances from the White House that it would be excluded from any potential auto tariffs even after it struck a revised trade deal with the Trump administra­tion, two people familiar with the matter said.

The trade pact negotiated by Canada and Mexico to replace the North American Free Trade Agreement includes side agreements that would exempt the countries from any duties on cars. Annual vehicle exports up to 2.6 million units from each nation won’t be affected by U.S. tariffs on foreign cars.

Trump’s imposition of duties on imported steel and aluminum sparked swift retaliatio­n from China and some of America’s closest allies including Canada and the European Union.

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