Miami Herald

Citing unfair trade, Biden hikes tariffs on Chinese EVs, batteries

- BY DAVID JORDAN CQ-Roll Call

The Biden administra­tion on Tuesday said it will raise tariffs on electric vehicles and other products from China in response to anti-competitiv­e practices that it found harmed American businesses and workers.

The increased tariff rates follow a review by U.S. Trade Representa­tive Katherine Tai, who found that China continues to engage in practices such as forcing U.S. companies to share their technology and intellectu­al-property theft.

The move boosts some tariff levels put in place by the Trump administra­tion in 2018 while institutin­g others for the first time.

National Economic Adviser Lael Brainard said on a call with reporters that China was using these tactics to “power its own growth at the expense of others” and that it is flooding the global marketplac­e with products that are underprice­d due to unfair practices.

“The President is taking a tough strategic approach combining investment at home, with enforcemen­t against China in key sectors, in contrast with the prior administra­tion that failed to follow through either on investment­s … or on China’s trade commitment­s,” Brainard said.

Under these section 301 tariffs, the rate on Chinese EVs will increase from

25% to 100% this year, while the rate on lithiumion EV batteries will increase from 7.5% to 25%.

Chinese-made electric cars are not available for sale in the U.S., although they proliferat­e elsewhere, accounting for nearly 60% of all EVs sold globally in 2023. The Alliance for American Manufactur­ing in February said the introducti­on of Chinese EVs to the American market “could be an extinction­level event for the U.S. auto sector.”

Currently, Chinese automaker BYD is able to manufactur­e an EV cheaper than the least expensive American electric car. While some have argued these autos could speed up the transition away from gasoline engines, lawmakers, including Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, have called for them to be banned due to fears they would undermine domestic manufactur­ers.

“Generation­s of free trade agreements that prioritize multinatio­nal corporatio­ns have devastated our communitie­s, harmed our economy, and crippled our job market,” Brown and six Democratic colleagues wrote in a May 1 letter to the administra­tion. “Keeping the 301 tariffs in place and increasing the tariffs where necessary maintains a critical piece of a proworker trade agenda.”

The tariff rate on semiconduc­tors and solar cells will increase from 25 percent to 50 percent. The administra­tion will also increase tariffs on certain types of steel and aluminum, ship-to-shore cranes and medical products, including syringes and personal protective equipment.

The move comes as the administra­tion continues to distribute federal funds from the 2021 bipartisan infrastruc­ture law, a domestic semiconduc­tormanufac­turing law and the 2022 climate-reconcilia­tion law. These laws each include provisions intended to help onshore domestic manufactur­ers, particular­ly in areas needed for the transition to a net-zero greenhouse-gas emission economy.

 ?? YASUYOSHI CHIBA AFP/Getty Images/TNS | Feb. 24, 2024. ?? China’s Wuling displays the electric vehicle Air ev in Jakarta. The Alliance for American Manufactur­ing in February said the introducti­on of Chinese EVs to the American market ‘could be an extinction-level event for the U.S. auto sector.’
YASUYOSHI CHIBA AFP/Getty Images/TNS | Feb. 24, 2024. China’s Wuling displays the electric vehicle Air ev in Jakarta. The Alliance for American Manufactur­ing in February said the introducti­on of Chinese EVs to the American market ‘could be an extinction-level event for the U.S. auto sector.’

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