Jamaica Gleaner

Tariffs on imported cars could harm US economy, auto industry

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THE TRUMP administra­tion’s new tariffs on aluminum and steel and the threat of more duties on imported cars and car parts will weaken the US economy and inflict serious damage on the nation’s auto industry, a panel of trade analysts warned earlier this month.

Americans will pay thousands of dollars more for new cars and trucks as a result of the tariffs, and as many as 700,000 workers in the auto industry could lose their jobs, the analysts told a Senate committee.

Tariffs are not only a terrible idea, “they’re self-destructiv­e,” said Bryan Riley, director of the National Taxpayers Union’s Free Trade Initiative.

With “sloppily applied tariffs” as the centrepiec­e of the administra­tion’s trade policy, “we can expect to get all of the pain from higher import prices but little of the gain” that would come from a more strategic levying of duties, said Thea Mei Lee, president of the Economic Policy Institute, a non-partisan think tank based in Washington.

The analysts made their dire prediction­s during a hearing before the Senate Health, Education, Labour and Pensions Committee, which is looking into the tariffs’ effect on the auto industry.

The committee’s chairman, Senator Lamar Alexander, said in an interview that he hopes the hearing will demonstrat­e not only the dangers of “piling tariffs on top of tariffs,” but that zero tariffs would be the best approach for the auto industry and other manufactur­ers.

In Tennessee, the number of auto jobs has nearly doubled, and exports and family incomes have increased under the North American Free Trade Agreement, which eliminated most tariffs between the United States, Mexico, and Canada. A third of the state’s manufactur­ing workforce is now employed in the automobile industry.

“All of the evidence supports that a zero-tariff policy under NAFTA has helped raised family income in Tennessee,” Alexander said. “And that policy would be good to apply to our relationsh­ips with other countries in the world, particular­ly our allies like Europe and Japan and South Korea.”

Though President Donald Trump said in June that his goal is “no tariffs, no (trade) barriers,” he has imposed a 25 per cent tariff on imported steel and a 10 per cent tariff on imported aluminum, arguing that the dumping of cheap imported metals has harmed US companies and jobs.

25 PER CENT AUTOS TARIFF

Trump also instructed the Commerce Department in May to look into the possibilit­y of imposing a 25 per cent tariff on foreign autos and parts by declaring them a threat to national security – the same justificat­ion he used to levy the duties on aluminum and steel. In July, he appeared to back off the threat to impose tariffs on cars from the European Union after meeting with European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker.

Regardless, the Commerce Department had been expected to issue its report on possible auto tariffs in August but later said it needed more time.

The tariffs on aluminum and steel already are rippling through the auto-supply chain, said John Bozzella, president and chief executive officer of the Associatio­n of Global Automakers, a trade group that represents the US operations of internatio­nal car manufactur­ers, equipment suppliers and others.

The price of steel has jumped 50 per cent since the tariffs were announced, Bozzella said.

A 25 per cent tariff on foreign cars and parts would cause a five per cent drop in employment in the auto sector, which translates into more than 600,000 lost jobs, if US trading partners retaliate as expected, according to an analysis by the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics.

Another 117,000 dealers also could lose their jobs, concluded a separate study by the Center for Automotive Research.

What’s more, a tariff on auto imports and parts could cause car prices to jump by US$2,100 for compact cars and nearly US$7,000 for some SUVs, the Peterson Institute estimates.

When used strategica­lly, tariffs can be an important and useful tool, providing leverage to address unfair trade practices such as currency manipulati­on and intellectu­al property theft, Lee said.

“However, the Trump administra­tion’s tariffs have been erraticall­y implemente­d, inconsiste­ntly messaged, and sometimes, apparently motivated by politics or whim,” she said. “This administra­tion appears to have no overarchin­g strategy or goal in sight.”

Senator Doug Jones called the Trump administra­tion’s trade policy “totally incoherent” and said it is hurting not only the auto industry, but also businesses and farmers.

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