World
Trump slaps 25% duties on car imports to US
Shares of automakers fell in after-hours trading and US equity index futures slid, indicating stocks were headed for a lower open on Thursday.
Reuters
US President Donald Trump on Wednesday unveiled a 25% tariff on imported cars and light trucks starting next week, widening the global trade war he kicked off upon regaining the White House this year in a move auto industry experts expect will drive up prices and stymie production.
“What we’re going to be doing is a 25% tariff for all cars that are not made in the United States,” Trump said at an event in the Oval Office.
Trump, who sees tariffs as a tool to raise revenue to offset his promised tax cuts and to revive a long-declining US industrial base, said collections would begin on April 3, the day after he plans to announce reciprocal tariffs aimed at the countries responsible for the bulk of the US trade deficit.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen described the move as “bad for businesses, worse for consumers,” while Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney labeled it a “direct attack” on Canadian workers.
“We will defend our workers, we will defend our companies, we will defend our country, and we will defend it together,” Carney told reporters in Ottawa.
The United Auto Workers, long-standing critics of free trade agreements it says have destroyed American jobs, lauded it.
“These tariffs are a major step in the right direction for autoworkers and blue-collar communities across the country, and it is now on the automakers, from the Big Three to Volkswagen and beyond, to bring back good union jobs to the US,” UAW President Shawn Fain said in a statement.
Shares of automakers fell in after-hours trading and US equity index futures slid, indicating stocks were headed for a lower open on Thursday.
The legal basis for the action is a 2019 national security investigation under Section 232 of the Trade Act of 1962 into auto imports conducted by Trump’s first administration. That probe found that auto imports impair US national security, but at the time Trump did not take action to impose tariffs.
In an indication of the hastiness with which the new levies are being imposed, Trump’s directive included temporary exemptions for auto parts while government officials sort through the complexities of turning his proclamation into practice.
It exempts for now, for instance, automotive parts that are compliant with the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) on trade that Trump negotiated during his first term. The agreement allows for largely duty-free trade between the US and its two largest trading partners.
“USMCA-compliant automobile parts will remain tariff-free until the Secretary of Commerce, in consultation with US Customs and Border Protection (CBP), establishes a process to apply tariffs to their non-US content,” White House principal deputy press secretary Harrison Fields said on X.
It further exempts until May 3 all other auto parts imports.
Brad Setser, a former US Treasury official now with the Council on Foreign Relations, said some 4 million cars from Canada and Mexico now faced 25% or more tariffs, which would likely drive up prices and dampen US car sales for “a while.”
He said the tariffs were a “clear violation” of USMCA and also raised questions about South Korea’s free trade agreement.
The economic impact could be significant, he said, noting that US imports of finished vehicles are close to a percentage point of US gross domestic product.
The US imported $474 billion worth of automotive products in 2024, including passenger cars worth $220 billion. Mexico, Japan, South Korea, Canada and Germany, all close US allies, were the biggest suppliers.
STOCKS FALL
Ahead of Trump’s announcement, shares of US-listed automakers fell on concerns that tariffs would send shock waves through a global auto industry that is already reeling from uncertainty caused by Trump’s rapid-fire tariff threats and occasional reversals.
The US stock market also closed lower on worries over tariffs, which have dogged investors for much of the last month. The benchmark S&P 500 Index fell 1.1% ahead of the press conference, and is down more than 4% so far in March for its worst monthly performance in nearly a year.
Since taking office on January 20, Trump has announced and delayed tariffs on Canada and Mexico for what he alleges is their role in allowing the opioid fentanyl into the US; set import taxes on goods from China for the same reason; launched hefty duties on imports of steel and aluminum; and has repeatedly touted his plans to announce global reciprocal tariffs on April 2.
Regarding the coming April 2 announcement, Trump indicated the measures may not be the like-for-like levies he has been pledging to impose.
“We’re going to make it very lenient,” Trump said. “I think people will be very surprised. It’ll be, in many cases, less than the tariff they’ve been charging (the US) for decades.”
The new vehicle levies were expected to drive costs of cars higher for consumers by thousands of dollars, hitting new vehicle sales and resulting in job losses, since the US automotive industry relies heavily on imported parts, according to the Center for Automotive Research.
“At a time when cost is the number one concern for American car buyers, US automakers are working to provide a range of affordable vehicles for consumers,” Jennifer Safavian, president and CEO of Autos Drive America, a trade group representing foreign automakers, said in a statement. “The tariffs imposed today will make it more expensive to produce and sell cars in the United States, ultimately leading to higher prices, fewer options for consumers, and fewer manufacturing jobs in the US”