Donald
Trump announces new 25% tariffs on cars from overseas
Canada’s
prime minister, Mark Carney, describes the levies as a ‘direct attack’ and vows
to defend Canadian workers and companies
Dominic
Rushe and Callum Jones in New York, and Justin McCurry in Tokyo
Wed 26 Mar
2025 21.56 EDT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/mar/26/trump-new-car-tariffs
Donald Trump
announced plans to impose sweeping 25% tariffs on cars from overseas on
Wednesday, days before the US president is expected to announce wide-ranging
levies on other goods from around the world.
“What we’re
going to be doing is a 25% tariff for all cars that are not made in the United
States,” Trump said in the Oval Office. “We start off with a 2.5% base, which
is what we’re at, and go to 25%.”
The
announcement drew swift condemnation from the European Union and from the
Canadian prime minister, Mark Carney, who called 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 said.
The European
Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, described the move as “bad for
businesses, worse for consumers”.
Trump later
threatened further tariffs if the EU worked with Canada “in order to do
economic harm to the USA”.
Writing on
his own social media platform, Truth Social, he said if they did so, “large
scale Tariffs, far larger than currently planned, will be placed on them both
in order to protect the best friend that each of those two countries has ever
had!”
The Japanese
prime minister, Shigeru Ishiba, said his government was considering
“appropriate measures” in response to the announcement. “Naturally, we will
consider all options.”
South
Korea’s auto sector would face “considerable difficulties” when the tariffs
came into effect and the government was planning an emergency response by
April, the industry minister, Ahn Duk-geun, told a meeting of industry
officials on Thursday.
The tariffs
will go into effect next week, on 2 April, Trump claimed, and the US will start
collecting them the following day. “This is very exciting,” he said, suggesting
the move would spur economic growth.
In February,
Trump floated the idea of a 25% tariff on imported vehicles but offered no
other details. On Monday, the president hinted that the auto industry levies
could come in “the very near future”.
On 2 April –
a day Trump has dubbed “liberation day” – the president is expected to unveil a
wide range of so-called reciprocal tariffs: levies on imported goods that the
Trump administration argues are unfairly taxed by the US’s trading partners.
Trump has
long argued that the US is being cheated by its trading partners and that
tariffs are the best remedy. However, he has delayed or watered down his tariff
plans on several occasions. His stance has worried investors, leading to sharp
sell-offs in US stock markets, and has proved unpopular with both the corporate
US and consumers.
Many
economists have expressed alarm, too, warning that the president’s tariff plan
would risk increasing prices across the US. A study by Anderson Economic Group,
an automotive consultant, for example, found that blanket tariffs on Canada and
Mexico risks increasing US car prices by as much as $12,000.
Mexico,
Japan, South Korea, Canada and Germany are among the top car exporters to the
US. Will Scharf, a White House official, claimed the new car tariffs would
result in more than $100bn in annual revenue to the 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.
India’s Tata
Motors, meanwhile, slid 5% and Tesla’s biggest Indian supplier, Sona Comstar,
dropped over 4%, leading to a 1.2% drop in the auto sector in the world’s
third-largest auto market.
Shares in
South Korea’s Hyundai Motor shed more than 4% and sister automaker Kia Corp
fell more than 3% after Trump’s announcement. Hyundai Motor shares are set to
post their biggest daily drop since late October last year. Hyundai, together
with affiliate Kia, is the world’s third-largest automaker by sales.
Shares in
Toyota, the world’s top-selling automaker, dropped 3.7% in early trading in
Tokyo, while Nissan lost 3.2% and Honda 3.1%. In South Korea, Hyundai shares
fell 3.4%.
The tariffs
will rattle Japan’s auto industry, a key component of the world’s
fourth-largest economy. The sector accounts for about a tenth of Japan’s
workforce, while vehicles made up about a third of its ¥21.3tn ($142bn) in
exports to the US last year.
Speaking
before Trump’s announcement, Masanori Katayama, chair of the Japan Automobile
Manufacturers Association, said a 25% tariff on cars from overseas “would have
a negative impact overall on the economies of the United States and Japan”.
Despite
hopes that Japan would not be targeted, ministers in Tokyo have so far been
unsuccessful in persuading their US counterparts to grant exemptions on exports
such as steel and vehicles.
Trump on
Wednesday said the tariffs could be net neutral for Tesla, the electric vehicle
company that is led by Elon Musk. Musk later posted on X that Tesla would not
be unscathed. “The tariff impact on Tesla is still significant,” he wrote.
Trump wrote
on Truth Social earlier this month: “Have no fear, we will WIN everything!!!”,
claiming that tariffs were already “pouring money” into the country.
But a Harris
poll conducted for the Guardian found that the majority of Americans were
already worried about the impact tariffs would have on their finances. Ninety
per cent of Democrats, 69% of independents and 57% of Republicans reported they
were concerned about tariffs.
Industry
groups sounded the alarm on Wednesday. “Throwing away tens of thousands of jobs
on both sides of the border will mean giving up North America’s auto leadership
role, instead encouraging companies to build and hire anywhere else but here,”
said Candace Laing, president and CEO of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce.
“This tax hike puts plants and workers at risk for generations, if not
forever.”
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