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US auto tariffs to cause upheaval, backfire on American carmakers

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Bright Star

Mar 25, 2025, 18:21


A truck loads containers at Tangshan Port, North China's Hebei province. [Photo/Xinhua]

Global Times-The impending US tariff policy is causing considerable upheaval within the global vehicle industry, raising alarms among stakeholders about its potential ramifications for the entire auto supply chain.

However, even against the backdrop of the volatile trade environment, certain indispensable links and key components remain essential to the industry's development, notably those sourced from China, which continue to play a pivotal role in maintaining the efficiency and competitiveness of auto manufacturing.

International carmakers are rushing to ship vehicles and core components to the US to get ahead of the next round of Washington's tariffs, the Financial Times reported on Sunday.

Apparently, fearing the potential chaos that the tariffs, which will come into effect on April 2, could inflict on automotive supply chains, international carmakers are scrambling to ship inventory to the US, a move that could severely strain global supply chains.

Last year, the US imported $471 billion worth of vehicle products. That included $214 billion worth of cars, $192 billion worth of parts and $65 billion worth of trucks, buses and special purpose vehicles. 

While it remains unclear the exact tariffs the US will impose on each country, the deeply entrenched networks of global automotive supply chains cannot be unwound overnight. The development so far indicates that the US market and the US auto industry still have high dependence on external supply chains, and the tariffs won't change the fact that they still need to import.  

Despite the US government's attempts to promote the reshoring of manufacturing and boost domestic production through policies, the production of many critical components, especially those for next-generation vehicles, cannot be easily transferred back to the US in the short term. The complex and globalized auto supply chain system that the US has long established determines its diverse demand for parts. For new-energy vehicles (NEVs) in particular, the US has a growing need for imported parts due to its shortcomings in key technologies and production links.

S&P Global Mobility warned in a March 12 report that with tariffs imposed on Canada and Mexico, it expects significant disruption in the region, with the potential for North American production to drop by up 20,000 units per day within a week.

For China, the direct impact of the tariff on vehicle exports to the US is limited. China's auto exports to the US accounted for about 2 percent of the country's total auto exports or just 0.4 percent of the auto sales in 2024, according to S&P Global Mobility data.

More importantly, China has made remarkable progress in the auto parts field, especially in NEVs and some core technologies. The production capacity of certain key parts has become an irreplaceable part of the global supply chain. For instance, the US is China's largest export market for auto components, accounting for about 15-20 percent - by value - of such exports in recent years, according to S&P Global Mobility data.

China's auto parts industry has formed a complete system, supported by a large-scale manufacturing base and continuous innovation. Take power batteries as an example. Chinese power battery companies not only account for a large share of global production capacity but also have rich achievements in technological innovation. The continuous iteration and upgrading of lithium-iron-phosphate battery technology, with increasing energy density and decreasing costs, have made Chinese-made power batteries highly competitive in the global market.  

Also, in the field of rare-earth materials, China has a complete industrial chain from mining and refining to the research, development and application of related materials, ensuring a stable and high-quality raw material supply for global vehicle parts production. 

China also has structural advantages in the fields of electric drive systems and intelligent components, meeting the needs of the global market. This advantage is difficult for the US to replace through localization or "friend-shoring" in the short term. 

In conclusion, the US tariffs may temporarily disrupt trade flows, which could ultimately backfire by increasing costs for American automakers and disrupting their normal production and sales processes.

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gork

The Great Satan has gone totalitarian.

The tariffs are, of course, blatant violations of WTO rules, which is why the Great Satan has blocked the appointment of arbitration judges. That's not to say the Great Satan ever abided by any of the rulings anyway.

Venezuela produced 921,000 barrels of crude oil per day in 2024, according to data provided to CNN by Lipow Oil Associates.

Of that, 351,000 barrels per day were shipped to China last year, the top foreign destination for Venezuelan oil. Second behind China was the US, which received 228,000 barrels per day.
- Trump says any country buying Venezuelan oil will face a 25% tariff

As part of his plan to revive US shipbuilding, US President Donald Trump is drafting an executive order that would rely on funding from a USTR's proposal to levy fines of up to $1.5 million on China-made ships or vessels from fleets that include ships made in China to American ports, per Reuters.
- Opposition grows as USTR holds hearing on levies on Chinese ships

Get that? It's not ships owned by corporations in China, it's any shp manufactured in China. China has a whopping 230 times the ship-building capacity of the Great Satan. So it's not as though this policy could ever work. 98% of ships calling at ports in the land they thieved were manufactured in China. So it looks like isolationism and currency debasement, similar to Brexit in Poodleville, which the Independent called a "monumental act of self-harm". Sweden has joined the Great Satan protests ("Leftists Push Feb 28 'Economic Blackout' Over Corporate 'Greed,' Waning DEI") against supermarkets: 
It is one of several cost-of-living protests that have unfolded across Europe in recent weeks. Shoppers in Bulgaria boycotted big retail chains and supermarkets last month in protest at rising food prices, reportedly leading to a drop in turnover of almost 30%. In January, a boycott in Croatia spread to Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro and Serbia.
- Swedish shoppers boycott supermarkets over ‘runaway’ food prices

I'd say fasting was an ESSENTIAL regimen anyway as you consume zero carbs or proteins, thereby burning fats to produce ketones which damaged cells can't use efficiently.

As his niece said, he has long embraced cheating as a way of life. War criminal, The Donald 1.0, was unable to fire the head of Elizabeth Warren's CFPB, so simply appointed Mick Mulvaney as a second head  of the organisation. Absurd!

Trump’s announcement that ‘[h]e who saves his country does not violate any law’ signals a new lawless order
- Trump heralds end of international law

The Anglo/Jew gangsters starated both World Wars to parasite off the planet with "jew-confett", before defaulting outright on gold in 1971. It also cheats wholesale at the Olympics.j War criminal, The Donald, has filed for bankruptcy several times over the years. His oft-used trick of extracting large profits from his companies even as they go bankrupt was compared by max. Kiester to gangsters who burn down their own store to collect on the insurance.