Washington :President Donald Trump
signed executive orders Tuesday to relax some of his 25% tariffs on automobiles
and auto parts, a significant reversal as the import taxes threatened to hurt
domestic manufacturers.
Automakers and independent analyses
have indicated that the tariffs could raise prices, reduce sales and make U.S.
production less competitive worldwide. Trump portrayed the changes as a bridge
toward automakers moving more production into the United States. “We just
wanted to help them during this little transition, short term," Trump told
reporters. "We didn’t want to penalize them. ”
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent,
who spoke earlier at a White House briefing on Tuesday, said the goal was to
enable automakers to create more domestic manufacturing jobs.
“President Trump
has had meetings with both domestic and foreign auto producers, and he’s
committed to bringing back auto production to the U.S.,” Bessent said. “So we
want to give the automakers a path to do that, quickly, efficiently and create
as many jobs as possible.”
Trump signed one order on Tuesday
that amended his previous 25% auto tariffs, making it easier for vehicles that
are assembled in the U.S. with foreign parts to not face prohibitively high
import taxes.
The amended order provides a rebate
for one year of 3.75% relative to the sales prices of domestically assembled
vehicles. That figure was reached by putting the 25% import tax on parts that
make up 15% of a vehicle's sales price. For the second year, the rebate would
equal 2.5% of a vehicle's sales price, as it would apply to a smaller share of
the vehicle's parts.
A senior Commerce Department
official, insisted on anonymity to preview the order on a call with reporters,
said automakers told Trump that the additional time would enable them to ramp
up the construction of new factories, after automakers warned that it would
take time for them to shift their supply chains. The official said automakers
would over the next month announce additional shifts for workers, new hires and
plans for new facilities.
Stellantis Chairman John Elkann said
in a statement that the company appreciates the president's tariff relief
measures. “While we further assess the impact of the tariff policies on our
North American operations, we look forward to our continued collaboration with
the U.S. Administration to strengthen a competitive American auto industry and
stimulate exports," he said.
General Motors CEO Mary Barra said
the automaker is grateful for Trump's support of the industry, and she noted
the company looks forward to conversations with the president and working with
the administration.
“We believe the President’s leadership is helping level the
playing field for companies like GM and allowing us to invest even more in the
U.S. economy," Barra said in a statement.
Jim Farley, president and CEO of
Ford Motor Company, stressed that his company does more than its peers to
manufacture domestically.
“We will continue to work closely
with the administration in support of the president’s vision for a healthy and
growing auto industry in America," Farley said. “As the right policies are
put in place, it will be important for the major vehicle importers to match
Ford’s commitment to building in America. If every company that sells vehicles
in the U.S. matched Ford’s American manufacturing ratio, 4 million more
vehicles would be assembled in America each year.”
But changing direction doesn't help
an industry that thrives on stability, said Sam Fiorani, analyst at business
forecasting firm AutoForecast Solutions. “Finding a way to get the auto
industry back working has to be paramount in this,” Fiorani said. “The tariffs
have not looked at this industry, the way it works, and expect it to be able to
jump and relocate production at the blink of an eye. It just doesn’t work that
way.
“Making a production change for
vehicle manufacturing takes minimum, months, and usually years, along with
hundreds of millions if not billions of dollars,” he added. "And so it is
not something that they take lightly.”
The Wall Street Journal first
reported details of the actions. The White House's Rapid Response account on X
said Trump signed a second order Tuesday afternoon to prevent his various
tariffs from being stacked on top of his existing taxes on imported autos and
auto parts.
The tariffs imposed by Trump were
seen by some as an existential threat to the auto sector. Arthur Laffer, whom
Trump gave the Presidential Medal of Freedom to during his first term, said in
a private analysis that the tariffs without any modifications could add $4,711
to the cost of a vehicle.
New vehicles sold at $47,462 on
average last month, according to auto-buying resource Kelley Blue Book.
Tariffs
stress the automotive supply chain, a complex web which spans the globe. Not
only do many auto parts cross North American borders several times before being
assembled into a finished vehicle, auto manufacturers rely on suppliers around
the world for thousands of components.
Increased levies would certainly
cost new car buyers — sensitive to inflation — more, driving them to the used
vehicle market and quickly straining the availability of pre-owned cars.
Tariffs also impact the cost of owning and maintaining a vehicle.
The modifications come as Trump
marks 100 days back in the White House by going to Michigan, a state defined by
auto manufacturing. Trump won the state in last year's election by promising to
increase factory jobs.
Still, it remains unclear what
impact Trump's broader tariffs will have on the U.S. economy and auto sales.
Most economists say the tariffs — which could ultimately hit most imports —
would raise prices and slow economic growth, possibly hurting auto sales
despite the relief that the administration intends to offer on its previous
policies.