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History says tariffs rarely work, but U.S. President Biden’s 100% tariffs on Chinese EVs could defy the trend, researcher says

By Tinglong Dai, Bernard T. Ferrari Professor of Business, Johns Hopkins University

In June 2019, then-presidential candidate Joe Biden tweeted: “Trump doesn’t get the basics. He thinks his tariffs are being paid by China. Any freshman econ student could tell you that the American people are paying his tariffs.”

Fast-forward five years to May 2024, and President Biden has announced a hike in tariffs on a variety of Chinese imports, including a 100% tariff that would significantly increase the price of Chinese-made electric vehicles.

For a nation committed to reducing greenhouse gas emissions, efforts by the U.S. to block low-cost EVs might seem counterproductive. At a price of around US$12,000, Chinese automaker BYD’s Seagull electric car could quickly expand EV sales if it landed at that price in the U.S., where the cheapest new electric cars cost nearly three times more.

As an expert in global supply chains, however, I believe the Biden tariffs can succeed in giving the U.S. EV industry room to grow. Without the tariffs, U.S. auto sales risk being undercut by Chinese companies, which have much lower production costs due to their manufacturing methods, looser environmental and safety standards, cheaper labor and more generous government EV subsidies.

Tariffs have a troubled history

The U.S. has a long history of tariffs that have failed to achieve their economic goals.

The Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of 1930 was meant to protect American jobs by raising tariffs on imported goods. But it backfired by prompting other countries to raise their tariffs, which led to a drop in international trade and deepened the Great Depression.

Biden speaks at a podium with people standing behind him holding United Steelworkers signs.

President George W. Bush’s 2002 steel tariffs also led to higher steel prices, which hurt industries that use steel and cost American manufacturing an estimated 200,000 jobs. The tariffs were lifted after the World Trade Organization ruled against them.

The Obama administration’s tariffs on Chinese-made solar panels in 2012 blocked direct imports but failed to foster a domestic solar panel industry. Today, the U.S. relies heavily on imports from companies operating in Southeast Asia – primarily Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam. Many of those companies are linked to China.

Why EV tariffs are different this time

Biden’s EV tariffs, however, might defy historical precedent and succeed where the solar tariff failed, for a few key reasons:

1. Timing matters.

When Obama imposed tariffs on solar panels in 2012, nearly half of U.S. installations were already using Chinese-manufactured panels. In contrast, Chinese-made EVs, including models sold in the U.S. by Volvo and Polestar, have negligible U.S. market shares.

Because the U.S. market is not dependent on Chinese-made EVs, the tariffs can be implemented without significant disruption or price increases, giving the domestic industry time to grow and compete more effectively.

By imposing tariffs early, the Biden administration hopes to prevent the U.S. market from becoming saturated with low-price Chinese EVs, which could undercut domestic manufacturers and stifle innovation.

2. Global supply chains are not the same today.

The COVID-19 pandemic exposed vulnerabilities in global supply chains, such as the risk of disruptions in the availability of critical components and delays in production and shipping. These issues prompted many countries, including the U.S., to reevaluate their dependence on foreign manufacturers for critical goods and to shift toward reshoring – bringing manufacturing back to the U.S. – and strengthening domestic supply chains.

The war in Ukraine has further intensified the separation between U.S.-led and China-led economic orders, a phenomenon I call the “Supply Chain Iron Curtain.”

In a recent McKinsey survey, 67% of executives cited geopolitical risk as the greatest threat to global growth. In this context, EVs and their components, particularly batteries, are key products identified in Biden’s supply chain reviews as critical to the nation’s supply chain resilience.

Ensuring a stable and secure supply of these components through domestic manufacturing can mitigate the risks associated with global supply chain disruptions and geopolitical tensions.

3. National security concerns are higher.

Unlike solar panels, EVs have direct national security implications. The Biden administration considers Chinese-made EVs a potential cybersecurity threat due to the possibility of embedded software that could be used for surveillance or cyberattacks.

U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo has discussed espionage risks involving the potential for foreign-made EVs to collect sensitive data and transmit it outside the U.S. Officials have raised concerns about the resilience of an EV supply chain dependent on other countries in the event of a geopolitical conflict.

BYD targets EV sales in Mexico

While Biden’s EV tariffs might succeed in keeping Chinese competition out for a while, Chinese EV manufacturers could try to circumvent the tariffs by moving production to countries such as Mexico.

This scenario is similar to past tactics used by Chinese solar panel manufacturers, which relocated production to other Asian countries to avoid U.S. tariffs.

Chinese automaker BYD, the world leader in EV sales, is already exploring establishing a factory in Mexico to produce its new electric truck. Nearly 10% of cars sold in Mexico in 2023 were produced by Chinese automakers.

Given the changing geopolitical reality, Biden’s 100% EV tariffs are likely the beginning of a broader strategy rather than an isolated measure. U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai hinted at this during a recent press conference, stating that addressing vehicles made in Mexico would require “a separate pathway” and to “stay tuned” for future actions.

Is Europe next?

For now, given the near absence of Chinese-made EVs in the U.S. auto market, Biden’s EV tariffs are unlikely to have a noticeable short-term impact in the U.S. They could, however, affect decisions in Europe.

The European Union saw Chinese EV imports more than double over a seven-month period in 2023, undercutting European vehicles by offering lower prices. Manufacturers are concerned. When finance ministers from the Group of Seven advanced democracies meet in late May, tariffs will be on the agenda.

Biden’s move might encourage similar protective actions elsewhere, reinforcing the global shift toward securing supply chains and promoting domestic manufacturing.

leetnewb ,

Random thoughts…

Odd to talk about timing without referencing the election year.

Protecting the solar industry with tariffs in 2012 was probably too late. The US and Europe panel industries were decimated and effectively ceded the market to China.

China bankrupted the only US supplier of rare earth metals in the early 2010s (Molycorp).

There is reporting from April that Chinese EV are piling up in European ports and not being moved to dealers.

GiovaMC1 ,

Analysts predict something that could or could not happen. More news at 10.

jarfil ,

News at 10: Shit happened! If only someone warned us.

You can only pick to live either in the future, or in the past. One is uncertain, the other is unchangeable, and the “present” is an illusion where one turns into the other. Choose wisely.

ericjmorey ,

Tarrifs are only a positive in cases where they are conditioned on labor, environmental, and other externalities being priced in and regional subsidies being countered. That seems like the case here.

But I suspect that the threat is being used as a negotiation tactic and China will call the bluff.

Dark_Arc ,
@Dark_Arc@social.packetloss.gg avatar

Agree on the first part … disagree on the latter.

Joe has invested heavily in domestic production of “the next generation of technology” (chips, solar panels, electric vehicles, etc).

This is in no small part about protecting that … and I don’t think there’s much in terms of negotiating that China could do here.

averyminya ,

The extreme support that Intel has gotten from our government to move chip production stateside agrees with this

bquintb ,
@bquintb@midwest.social avatar

They could, but they also may not. No one knows, this is news.

stallmer ,

They never work…except for this time maybe!

scroll_responsibly ,
@scroll_responsibly@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

Repeating “tariffs never work” doesn’t make it any more true. America was founded and developed industry by using a combination of tariffs and free real estate (stolen land) to fund development of the internal US economy. And it worked. Same with Canada’s National Policy in the 1800s.

Numberone ,

See this makes sense to me. In good faith I don’t understand how tariffs couldn’t work. I mean, even if it doesn’t STOP import of Chinese EV’s, the uptake would be so much less than if they were 50% off…right?

History is rife with examples of countries developing their own industries by making imports more expensive.

ericjmorey ,

You’re defining “work” as Chinese manufactured EVs having less market share. But if that means everyone that buys pays more for an EV and fewer EVs are sold, did it result in the most benefit for American citizens? What about the rest of the world’s population, in which situation is the net benefit greater?

avidamoeba ,
@avidamoeba@lemmy.ca avatar

You’re describing the standard neoliberal argument for free trade. It kinda makes sense on the surface, if you don’t consider its externalities such as its impacts on labor and domestic aggregate demand. Luckily you don’t have to guess what their effects are as you can see many of them in the US today. For example the rise of Trump and the desire to do away with the remains of the American democracy. Walking down that path to its end likely won’t result in maximum EVs in people’s hands.

ericjmorey ,

You seem to have presented a non sequitur based argument.

I wasn’t making any positive claims. I was clarifying the terms of what one might consider “working”. And how we may want to consider how we value people without regard to geopolitical boarders.

Numberone ,

Yeah maybe the problem is no one is describing what “work” means in this case. The goal is to reduce Chinese market share in the US EV market, protection of US industry ( lets be honest, probably the owners’ income stream). I don’t see that goal failing being likely.

ericjmorey ,

If that’s all one wants to consider when evaluating the ethics of the policy in question, then it seems like the “correct” policy.

ShepherdPie ,

Is there a benefit to buying a brand new car just because it’s an EV and it was cheap? This is like saying it’s better for the environment to get a new phone because it gets better battery life even though your old one is working fine.

One way to curb emissions is to not waste things that were already built by tossing them in the trash and buying a newer version.

ericjmorey ,

If the only goal is to reduce emissions, your concerns of the production and use of more EVs should absolutely be taken into account. However, I don’t think that should be the only concern when thinking about the ethics of the proposed policy.

sonori ,
@sonori@beehaw.org avatar

While I think in this case they won’t have an effect because no Amarican company is even trying to compete in the space, I feel like claiming “history says tarrifs rarely work” is pretty misleading. The high tarrifs caused by the US generating nearly all federal income by tarrifs in the 17 and 18 hundreds are after all widely credited with being the reason the northern US went from being a minor agricultural nation dependent entirely on european industrial goods to becoming one of the largest industrialized nations so quickly.

Indeed that was why the WTO blocking third world nations from putting tarrifs on western goods was so heavily criticized by the left a few decades ago, before China proved you could do it without said tarrifs so long as your competitors were greedy enough to outsource their industry to you.

Dyf_Tfh ,
@Dyf_Tfh@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

A 100% tariff is simply way too overkill. At this point it is not a tariff, but a straight up ban.

The aim of a tariff is making a fair competition between local products and imports, ultimately to lower prices for consumers.

What has been done here, is pure protectionism for the US companies that didn’t invest enough in EV.

In the EU where we actually have Chinese competition, the cheapest EU-made EV (Citroën eC3) start at 23000€ and multiple models at this price point are coming in the next few years (Renault 5, VW ID2…)

ShepherdPie , (edited )

A $12k car selling for $24k after the tariff is still highly competitive in the US market. It doesn’t seem so bad to me.

What has been done here, is pure protectionism for the US companies that didn’t invest enough in EV.

The only US companies are Tesla, Ford and GM. China selling these cars well below cost here is going to harm every manufacturer that sells in the US. This isn’t about protecting US companies like everyone (who sounds like they’re living in 1970) likes to claim.

Dyf_Tfh ,
@Dyf_Tfh@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

The BYD Seagul at 12k$ is not really the type of car that could be successfully exported in western markets. The 30kwh battery is too small. I could see the upper trim with the larger battery being successful in Europe, but this is absolutely not going to work in USA.

A better comparison is the 27k$ made in china BYD seal vs the 38k$ made in USA Tesla model 3.

And also there is a massive price EV price war in China. I don’t believe any of their EV manufacturers is currently making money at those prices.

Even when they exports to lower income countries like Thailand, they are significantly more expensive.

tardigrada OP ,

This is related, particularly as the discussion is to a large part around cheap cars:

China: Carmakers Implicated in Uyghur Forced Labor - (February 2024)

China’s electric vehicle battery supply chain shows signs of forced labor, report says - (June 2023)

SnotFlickerman ,
@SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

To be fair to China, our top EV maker’s (Tesla) CEO Musk claimed that COVID wasn’t real and didn’t want to shut down operations and Musk claimed he liked China more because of their propensity to lock the workers in the factory due to COVID restrictions.

The people who run US companies will absolutely used forced labor if they can get away with it.

I’m not trying to paint China as some glowing bastion of freedom (it’s far from it, obviously) but it’s weird to present this as though it’s a “China” problem and not a “capitalism” problem. Companies like Nestle won’t commit to removing forced labor from their chains of operation, hiding behind “it’s too hard to find it all!”

reuters.com/…/hershey-nestle-cargill-win-dismissa…

The lawsuit being dismissed is evidence the US government also doesn’t care about forced labor. So China isn’t alone in not giving a shit.

Every major world power is some kind of dogshit, essentially.

tardigrada OP ,

They have to stop the use of forced labour in China, the U.S. and wherever this bs happens. This “U.S. bad, China bad okay” stance is unbearable.

SnotFlickerman ,
@SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

No shit they need to stop it. Do you or I have a choice in making that happen?

Short of a nationwide labor strike in every industry in both nations, no one citizen exactly has the power to make this stop, and all the legal avenues to make it stop are denied by both governments.

I love it when people complain shit needs to get done when there is no legal avenue to getting it done. Cool, what’s your plan chucklefuck? We’re supposed to just magic this better world into being by willing it so like The Secret or some other dumb shit?

They both suck because they fucking do. Part of the reason they do is that there is no recourse for regular citizens to stop this kind of thing from happening except boycotts and labor strikes. Boycotts do fuck-all because they’re busy selling the fruits of their forced labor to the rest of the planet, meaning they won’t lose enough money from the boycott to impact them. Meaning only labor strikes have meaningful impact.

Let me know when you’ve got all the laborers from both countries ready to go on strike. I’ll wait.

NoIWontPickAName ,

You’re an asshole

SnotFlickerman ,
@SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Brilliant rebuttal.

NoIWontPickAName ,

Meh, I’m not the guy you’re talking to, just the one who read the way you were talking down to people.

SnotFlickerman ,
@SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Because the best way to handle stupidity is to coddle it like Trump, right? That’s been working out just gangbusters, right?

Sometimes people say something fucking stupid and need to be told why it’s stupid.

Even if it’s just so other people don’t have to suffer these fools.

NoIWontPickAName ,

All of that can be done without being an asshole.

Let me guess, you describe yourself as someone who is “blunt” or “tells it like it is”?

There is something called tact, and amazingly enough, it allows you to talk to someone instead of talking down to them.

Listen to you though, “suffer these fools”, dramatic much?

Does it make you feel better to judge others or do you just do it to try and pretend that you are someone who matters?

TheRtRevKaiser ,

We have one overarching rule on Beehaw: Be Nice. Please try to consider this when you comment on this instance in the future.

TheRtRevKaiser ,

We have one overarching rule on Beehaw: Be Nice. Please try to consider this when you comment on this instance in the future.

jarfil ,

The discussion is about 💵💵, not about people.

If tariffs were a response to human rights violations, check the UN’s list of HR violations, there should be thousands, or millions, of tariffs everywhere. But, there aren’t, because the HR are just an excuse that 💵💵 uses whenever it suits it.

CanadaPlus ,

2019 Biden was right, tariffs hurt everybody. Behind closed doors Biden knows that, but also knows what further helping the Chinese could mean down the road.

regul ,

What could it mean? What’s the “nightmare scenario” here? The US has had a significant trade deficit with China for decades.

CanadaPlus ,

They get strong enough quick enough that they become geopolitically unstoppable. I don’t trust those guys to rule the world, or even have it sort of within reach.

SnotFlickerman ,
@SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

But you trust “Weapons of Mass Destruction” and “Tuskegee Syphilis Experiments” and “COINTELPRO” and “PRISM” US government?

I’m with Douglas Adams, if you want power you should explicitly be denied power. The only ones who deserve any power are those who don’t want it because they understand the implications and care deeply about making mistakes that could hurt people.

People who desire power only ever want to Rule and Control.

There isn’t a single world government that isn’t currently filled with idiots who are only in it for power and power alone.

Bring back fucking sortition, we’ve shown we’re not capable of handling a democratic system without it.

CanadaPlus ,

Actually, I agree. The US has had the opportunity to go rogue for decades, though, and so far has opted to ignore the outside world instead (with occasional, unpopular forays to the desert or jungle to feel like a big man). That’s probably down to their political system, and the fact voters don’t want to be bothered with empire building.

If it was China vs. the autocratic Trump empire, I’d seriously be considering China.

SnotFlickerman ,
@SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Thanks for the well considered reply. I agree that the US’s political system is part of what has held it back from going rogue, but the problems I referenced were all growing cancers that may very well lead to an autocratic Trump empire.

Just the Trump cases alone are absolutely destroying any credibility the legal system had left, and when people in a nation start to lose trust in their “justice” system… well, things tend to get pretty bad when people stop trusting authority and turn to Mob Justice.

Even without Trump as President, that’s where we’re headed because he has firmly shafted regular people’s trust that the legal system is in any way fair or just. We all know for fucksure now that the only thing that matters in the US is having money and connections.

When Trump was elected, it was because he was seen as the outsider to shake things up. People are still waiting on things to be shaken up in favor of regular ass people instead of corporations. That includes conservatives even if they’re too stupid to understand that’s what they are actually mad about. Don’t expect Trump’s wiping his ass with the legal system to not have long-term impacts.

That’s not going to end well, Trump as President or not.

CanadaPlus ,

Really, most of my hope for the mid-future is tied up in Europe. They have far-right movements there too, but it’s totally different in a lot of important ways, and possibly less catastrophic.

Failing that, I dunno. The world is a very scary place indeed.

SnotFlickerman ,
@SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Yeah, the EU is where I hold out my hopes, too.

Good luck out there, it is indeed scary.

wildncrazyguy ,

While I agree with your sentiment regarding people losing faith in their government, we have been on this road before a few times (antibellum era, William Jennings Bryan era, Joe McCarthy era). After a time of painful soul searching, we've always come back from these low periods. I have no reason to believe we won't overcome it again.

regul ,

Control it how? The US is as close as anyone has come to being a global hegemon and even then they can only do so much to nuclear states.

CanadaPlus , (edited )

Yeah, the “sort of within reach” thing is more plausible. China in the role of 1970’s America still scares me. Hell, 1970’s America scares me, and they were too busy boomering to commit all that much to world domination.

regul ,

Yeah but I’m still not clear on what the fear is exactly.

Like how do you envision it changing your life having China “in charge” vs the US?

CanadaPlus ,

I expect they’d treat us like we (the British empire) treated lesser foreign powers. They kind of already do, on the rare occasion they pay attention to little Canada. If they managed to gain direct power here, they’d treat us like the British treated their colonial subjects, or like the Chinese have already treated their westernmost minorities, and you can ask the Natives what that’s like.

Unlike America, they’re autocratic and openly, officially ethnocentric. That’s bad news for anyone not an elite Chinese person, and in the long term it’s bad news for even them, because purges.

regul ,

they’d treat us like we (the British empire) treated lesser foreign powers

How’s that? Disadvantageous trade agreements? You already have those.

What would “direct power” look like? China invades Canada, a country defended by US nukes, with the PLA? There’s a reason Iran and North Korea are still around despite open animus from the US.

My point is largely that these nebulous fears of “Chinese hegemony” are just that–nebulous. Asking people to drill down into what they’re really afraid of either reveals the status quo or impossible scenarios.

CanadaPlus ,

How’s that? Disadvantageous trade agreements? You already have those.

You know the Brits did worse that that.

Hell, our trade agreements with the US are fine anyway.

China invades Canada, a country defended by US nukes, with the PLA? There’s a reason Iran and North Korea are still around despite open animus from the US.

That assumes the US still has our back, and Iran doesn’t even have nukes, they’re just more trouble than they’re worth. In the long run, nukes only guarantee countries that actually have them, and that’s not us.

For what it’s worth, if China was a democracy, I’d be fine with them as the new hyperpower. But they’re not, so they are ideological enemies to me.

regul ,

Did worse than that to, like, China in the 19th c. But I thought you were talking about like France and Spain.

CanadaPlus ,

I admit I’m fuzzy on how it all went down, exactly, but I was indeed thinking of the opium stuff when I wrote that. And all the shifty dealings with natives here, when we bothered to treat them as actual people worthy of relations.

regul ,

The Opium Wars involved armed conflict on Chinese soil. That’s the sort of thing nukes deter.

CanadaPlus ,

Yes, if that specific bit happened to a nuclear nation, it would be the end of the world as we know it.

Do you think a world dominated by autocracies again would be fine, basically?

regul ,

I’m asking you what you think would be different if China was the largest global superpower?

If this is some great fear we’re all supposed to have to the point that we’ll forestall making progress on decarbonizing then it should be easy to clearly articulate what we’re afraid of happening.

CanadaPlus ,

I’ve tried to answer, but it’s tough because projecting geopolitics forward is always speculative. Why don’t you go now? Do you think democracy would be safe in that scenario? Is that important, in your opinion?

regul ,

The democracy I live under now keeps ignoring or delaying action on climate change in favor of things that are less important than the comfortable survival of our species. If it’s trying to convince me it’s worth saving it’s doing a bad job.

My ideological concerns are secondary to my ecological concerns.

CanadaPlus , (edited )

In the long term, autocracy is a far greater threat to the comfort of our species. Pretty much any and all history before 250 years ago is depressing as hell, and if democracy dies that’s where we’re headed, but with far more powerful technology to abuse. Climate change will suck, but we’ll adapt, even if we make it so bad we have to abandon the tropics entirely.

regul ,

We won’t be abandoning the tropics. The people who live there will be. And, based on current prevailing attitudes of temperate democracies, those fleeing the uninhabitable zones will be told to simply pound sand. It will be genocide by omission.

sabreW4K3 ,
@sabreW4K3@lazysoci.al avatar

Further helping the Chinese? Come TF on and get real. When did America ever help China? In fact when did America help anyone? America got greedy and has sucked all of the possible profit they could from American industry, when they decided to outsource it.

It started off as raw materials and then became wholesale manufacturing and China quickly became very good at making all the things you felt you were too good to make and then became very good at the things you needed them to make and now they’re just all round very good at doing all the things that you stopped doing so a handful of executives could have a larger bonus.

Help the Chinese? You’re drowning in your own shit and demanding China save you like you’re doing them a favour. America, the UK, let’s just say, the West in general needs China more than China needs us and its because of greedy CEOs and politicians who only see things in the short term. The idea that you’re helping China is your propaganda, it’s not reality.

CanadaPlus ,

And yet China still can’t make very good chips or CNC machines. That’s because fast development works by first picking up outsource work that’s simple, and then gradually moving to more complex types of value-added production. Without Western outsourcing, China would be economically like North Korea.

I have a feeling you’re on of those guys that thinks NK is Wakanda, though, so maybe that’s not as useful an analogy as I’d hope.

sabreW4K3 ,
@sabreW4K3@lazysoci.al avatar

Without Western outsourcing, China would be economically like North Korea.

Would/Could/Should

I have a feeling you’re on of those guys that thinks NK is Wakanda, though, so maybe that’s not as useful an analogy as I’d hope.

Ad hominem attacks, really?! Have a good day.

CanadaPlus , (edited )

Am I wrong? Are you not part of the (so-called) “anti-imperialist” crowd? Do you not think NK is secretly a great place to live?

Scrof ,

The notion that the West needs China more than vice versa is laughable. China is literally the biggest importer of Western goods and resources in the world including absolute dependence on American soybeans just to feed its population.

SaltySalamander ,

Without Nixon opening up trade relations with China when he did, China is probably still a largely agrarian nation today. They certainly wouldn't have industrialized as quickly as they did. The US did that, for better or worse.

jarfil ,

For decades China had a “3rd world country discount” on international transport, meaning:

  • send from China = almost free
  • sent to China = normal cost + extra fee

Not just the US, but every “1st world country” has been helping China, in the hopes of integrating it into a capitalist system and disrupting whatever is going on in there.

…and it would have worked, if it wasn’t for China not just doubling down, but going bananas on authoritarian interventionism.

Fubarberry ,
@Fubarberry@sopuli.xyz avatar

I’m torn between my dislike of the CCP, and really wanting an EV for $12k.

bluGill ,

Your local bike store should have a nice selection. I use my EV bike all the time and the car I keep for those few trips where the bike doesn't work just sits... You should too. Don't forget to check out the local transit options (and if - as is likely - they are bad demand better)

theneverfox ,

I’d personally love an ev bike, but it’d be wasted on me right now. I really want an electric car because you could run the AC all night and power a computer - I want a little hotel on wheels

redcalcium ,

Heck, Japanese manufacturers even sell $15K EVs in Japan (e.g. Nissan Sakura) but they don’t seem to be interested in selling them elsewhere.

SnotFlickerman ,
@SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar
fartington , (edited )

deleted_by_author

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  • TheAlbatross ,

    I’m not so sure I’d call myself a “tankie”, but I’d like a $12k new car and if it were an EV, even better. I recently paid more for a used car! Cars, like everything else, have gotten so stupidly expensive. It would have been nice to see one thing actually become more affordable because I know wages ain’t gonna increase accordingly for a long time.

    Neato ,
    @Neato@ttrpg.network avatar

    Foreign countries flooding the market with subsidized cars will end up killing local production. Then they can control the market.

    Really we should be subsidizing EVs from our own manufacturers.

    regul ,

    Kneecapping decarbonization efforts in the name of “jobs” and “the economy” is just straight up Republican policy. I do not care how many jobs are preserved on my rapidly warming planet.

    SnotFlickerman ,
    @SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

    But the status quo is more important than *checks notes… climate change! Won’t someone think of the economy! /s

    Semi-Hemi-Demigod ,
    @Semi-Hemi-Demigod@kbin.social avatar

    I think it has more to do with maintaining a manufacturing base for defense than it is about jobs or the economy.

    SnotFlickerman ,
    @SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

    Because bombing the future into burning rubble is preferable to burning it into rubble or something I guess.

    Semi-Hemi-Demigod ,
    @Semi-Hemi-Demigod@kbin.social avatar

    Nation-states were a stupid idea to begin with

    SnotFlickerman ,
    @SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

    Too right.

    🤝

    ShepherdPie ,

    How does everyone buying a brand new car result in decarbonization versus keeping the ones we’ve already expended carbon building and upgrading them when they break? There are 283 million cars on the road in the US and replacing them all is going to generate a metric fuckton of carbon.

    regul ,

    If you’ll notice he also increased tariffs on solar panels at the same time.

    ShepherdPie ,

    Yeah China has been doing the same with solar panels. Funny you bring it up since my wife used to work at a facility that made the ingots and sliced them up. They shut down several years ago since it was impossible to compete with Chinese prices. Hurray for cheap prices right?

    regul ,

    See above where I said I do not give a shit about how many jobs are preserved on my rapidly warming planet.

    ShepherdPie ,

    Cool you can act dramatically. Now that the theatrical portion is out of the way, maybe you can defend your position by responding to the topic of my comments.

    regul ,

    What’s there to defend? We need more solar panels. The cheaper they are the better.

    ShepherdPie ,

    How does putting manufacturers out of business lead to cheaper panels? What it leads to is low competition and higher prices in the long run.

    regul ,

    China’s solar panel industry isn’t a monopoly, much like their auto industry.

    The internal competition is part of the reason both are so cheap.

    NoneOfUrBusiness ,

    Really we should be subsidizing EVs from our own manufacturers.

    You are. Still not doing much to corporate greed.

    goferking0 ,

    We barely are/car makers just jack up their prices so they make more off the subsidy

    NoneOfUrBusiness ,

    car makers just jack up their prices so they make more off the subsidy

    Exactly.

    BastingChemina ,

    The argument of China subsidizing EV is always coming back but I would be curious to know the comparison with the US.

    The US are subsidizing EV too I would not be surprised if the amount of subsidy per EV produced is much higher for US manufacturers than China.

    ShepherdPie ,

    Where in the world can you buy a $12k EV that doesn’t come from China?

    We have subsidized them here with the $7500 credit and loans/grants to retool factories but it’s a drop in the bucket compared to what China is doing.

    Ford just released their financials for last quarter and it showed them losing $130k for every EV they sold: caranddriver.com/…/ford-ev-revenue-losses-q1-2024… so clearly they aren’t subsidized so much that they can sell them for pennies on the dollar like BYD.

    BastingChemina ,

    Is it really a drop in the bucket b when we take the value per vehicle ?

    If we compare Ford to BYD for example.

    In 2023 Ford sold around 2 millions cars and BYD around 3 millions.

    For Ford only 72 608 cars out of these 2 millions were EV (3.6%) For BYD it’s was almost 1.6 million EV (53.3%)

    In 2023 Ford got $9.2 billions from the US government to produce EV, so around $126 000 per EV sold in 2023.

    $126 000*1 600 000 = $2 trillions ! So unless BYD received more than $2 trillions dollars from the Chinese government in 2023 it means that each EV sold by Ford is more subsidized than an EV sold by BYD.

    This is not an analysis, I took huge shortcuts in this comment and might have done mistakes in the calculations.

    technocrit ,

    Foreign countries flooding the market with subsidized cars will end up killing local production.

    That’s good actually. Car dependency is a dead end for humanity.

    Neato ,
    @Neato@ttrpg.network avatar

    Completely different discussion. We aren’t moving away from them so not being able to produce them only hurts the us.

    ShepherdPie ,

    How does this change anything about car dependency?

    Rhaedas ,

    Wages not keeping in step with inflation is exactly why everything seems so expensive. $30k of today's money is the equivalent of less than $10k in the 80's, and cars were more than $10K then except for a few that ended up being examples of "you get what you pay for".

    I should probably state that as "wage increases being suppressed".

    goferking0 ,

    Which us manufacturer is even going for the cheap ev market? They’re just focusing on suvs

    It’s hard to not worry when these tariffs appear to only go after an area which no one will try to fill. Similar to the 70s when Japanese cars took off.

    ShepherdPie ,

    This isn’t just protecting US manufacturers its protecting all manufacturers that sell vehicles in the US. China selling cars at 1/3 the price of any other available on the market is just going to reduce competition and put a bunch of people out of work for no real benefit. If you need a cheap car buy a used one like everyone else.

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