The Japan Times - Trump auto tariffs strike at heart of North American trade

EUR -
AED 3.9636
AFN 76.076795
ALL 99.065981
AMD 422.043906
ANG 1.931871
AOA 989.564577
ARS 1157.790172
AUD 1.719171
AWG 1.945136
AZN 1.834208
BAM 1.955478
BBD 2.179971
BDT 131.208397
BGN 1.9561
BHD 0.406744
BIF 3159.699446
BMD 1.079132
BND 1.450168
BOB 7.461083
BRL 6.131845
BSD 1.079637
BTN 92.503198
BWP 14.821452
BYN 3.533235
BYR 21150.993561
BZD 2.168673
CAD 1.54372
CDF 3100.347182
CHF 0.953511
CLF 0.026617
CLP 1021.431022
CNY 7.845507
CNH 7.857065
COP 4476.780448
CRC 540.018594
CUC 1.079132
CUP 28.597007
CVE 110.729928
CZK 24.944467
DJF 191.783851
DKK 7.461338
DOP 68.254834
DZD 144.654821
EGP 54.567945
ERN 16.186985
ETB 140.386771
FJD 2.514972
FKP 0.833058
GBP 0.835087
GEL 2.978346
GGP 0.833058
GHS 16.723567
GIP 0.833058
GMD 77.697521
GNF 9340.969285
GTQ 8.331744
GYD 226.545849
HKD 8.396998
HNL 27.809289
HRK 7.535553
HTG 141.548331
HUF 402.128052
IDR 18060.25067
ILS 3.988004
IMP 0.833058
INR 92.359105
IQD 1413.663345
IRR 45431.470529
ISK 143.708174
JEP 0.833058
JMD 169.894389
JOD 0.765134
JPY 161.403676
KES 139.751104
KGS 93.521061
KHR 4274.442991
KMF 492.636805
KPW 971.200804
KRW 1587.339041
KWD 0.332694
KYD 0.899806
KZT 543.523029
LAK 23374.006079
LBP 96690.256057
LKR 319.65885
LRD 215.63755
LSL 19.942799
LTL 3.186397
LVL 0.652757
LYD 5.206823
MAD 10.391567
MDL 19.358979
MGA 5028.756489
MKD 61.512592
MMK 2265.407181
MNT 3768.086978
MOP 8.653996
MRU 42.965689
MUR 49.24037
MVR 16.61824
MWK 1873.373526
MXN 21.960234
MYR 4.788652
MZN 68.966988
NAD 19.942049
NGN 1664.173139
NIO 39.663454
NOK 11.308768
NPR 147.985436
NZD 1.891828
OMR 0.415439
PAB 1.079637
PEN 3.96527
PGK 4.356296
PHP 61.753338
PKR 302.426999
PLN 4.185031
PYG 8620.580651
QAR 3.928851
RON 4.978146
RSD 117.178621
RUB 91.191006
RWF 1528.051372
SAR 4.047952
SBD 9.07689
SCR 15.513714
SDG 647.479312
SEK 10.810745
SGD 1.450241
SHP 0.848029
SLE 24.577208
SLL 22628.866448
SOS 616.725876
SRD 39.490309
STD 22335.860359
SVC 9.446445
SYP 14030.722154
SZL 19.942347
THB 36.885023
TJS 11.762927
TMT 3.776963
TND 3.351245
TOP 2.527441
TRY 40.950049
TTD 7.325828
TWD 35.85944
TZS 2854.343888
UAH 44.683164
UGX 3945.368689
USD 1.079132
UYU 45.522505
UZS 13958.576361
VES 75.203448
VND 27663.55714
VUV 132.992887
WST 3.051534
XAF 655.858132
XAG 0.032026
XAU 0.000347
XCD 2.916409
XDR 0.813288
XOF 652.875445
XPF 119.331742
YER 265.466669
ZAR 19.932221
ZMK 9713.482278
ZMW 30.311431
ZWL 347.480168
  • RBGPF

    1.0000

    68

    +1.47%

  • RYCEF

    0.3500

    10.05

    +3.48%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    22.44

    +0.18%

  • NGG

    0.1700

    65.78

    +0.26%

  • VOD

    -0.1000

    9.27

    -1.08%

  • SCS

    0.3600

    11.32

    +3.18%

  • GSK

    -0.8700

    37.87

    -2.3%

  • BCC

    0.8200

    98.91

    +0.83%

  • BTI

    -0.2700

    41.1

    -0.66%

  • RELX

    0.2600

    50.67

    +0.51%

  • RIO

    0.1500

    60.23

    +0.25%

  • AZN

    -0.9000

    72.6

    -1.24%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    12.98

    +0.31%

  • BCE

    -0.1800

    22.78

    -0.79%

  • BP

    0.0200

    33.81

    +0.06%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.82

    +0.04%

Trump auto tariffs strike at heart of North American trade
Trump auto tariffs strike at heart of North American trade / Photo: ULISES RUIZ - AFP/File

Trump auto tariffs strike at heart of North American trade

US President Donald Trump's tariffs on imported cars strike at the heart of a North American free trade agreement, threatening to disrupt supply chains and raise prices, experts say.

Text size:

Thanks to the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement that came into effect in 2020 -- and its predecessor NAFTA -- the region became an assembly line spanning the three countries.

"We've been making this supply chain more sophisticated for 30 years," said Juan Francisco Torres Landa, a partner at business consulting firm Hogan Lovells in Mexico.

"There is regional integration based on inputs, raw materials, and processes in all three countries," he told AFP.

Trump said the tariffs were in response to America's trade partners "taking our jobs, taking our wealth," but the duties promise to be a headache due to the deep integration of production chains.

Here are some of the expected impacts of the tariffs, according to experts.

- Snarled supply chains -

During the assembly of a car or truck, parts often cross the borders of the three countries multiple times before the vehicle is finished.

Extensive supply chains have been built involving hundreds of suppliers from different countries.

A car key alone can have more than 50 components from 22 different suppliers in Asia, North America and Europe.

The White House said vehicles assembled in Mexico and Canada could qualify for lower tariffs under the USMCA deal depending on how many of their components are made in the United States.

"Given the complexity of regional supply chains -- where parts often cross borders multiple times -- verifying compliance may require time-consuming adjustments, increasing operational costs," the political risk consultancy firm EMPRA told clients.

"US automakers with production in Mexico could face rising costs and logistical complications, which may lead some to reassess their manufacturing strategies," it added.

- Growth constrained -

Mexico's economy is considered one of the most vulnerable to Trump's planned tariffs due to its close trade relations with the United States.

The Latin American nation is home to many foreign-owned vehicle plants operated by companies including Ford, General Motors, BMW, Volkswagen and Toyota.

More than 80 percent of Mexican exports go to the United States, including around three million vehicles a year.

The auto tariff announcement comes at a difficult time for Mexico's economy, the second largest in Latin America.

Experts surveyed monthly by the Mexican central bank expect economic growth of only 0.81 percent in 2025, worse than the 1.0 percent they predicted in February.

The trade tensions "generate uncertainty and affect private investment and production decisions in key export sectors," Geronimo Ugarte, chief economist at the financial firm Valmex, told AFP.

- Trade deal in limbo -

Mexico and Canada consider Trump's tariffs to be in violation of the USMCA.

Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said Thursday "there should be no tariffs" between Mexico, the United States and Canada as "that is the essence of the trade agreement."

Washington's announcements have left the agreement in limbo.

"We need to analyze whether... for Trump, the USMCA should be replaced, substituted or simply extinguished by starvation," Torres Landa said.

Although a review of the treaty is due by 2026, Jesus Carrillo, an expert at the Mexican Institute for Competitiveness, believes trade policy "is being negotiated directly and progressively between governments."

"We're moving from having a treaty to having deals," Carrillo said.

He believes that "the USMCA will remain in effect, but with Band-Aids."

- More expensive cars -

Analysts and US trading partners warn that the tariffs will raise prices for American consumers.

Philippe Waechter, chief economist at Ostrum Asset Management in Paris, thinks the price of a car could increase by $3,000.

There is a risk that consumers will buy fewer new cars, according to the British-based consultancy firm Capital Economics.

"Assuming that domestic producers respond by substantially increasing their own prices, (the tariffs) could make new vehicles something of a luxury item," it said.

H.Nakamura--JT