特朗普的关税威胁给欧洲汽车业蒙上阴影
Trump's Tariff Threats Cast Shadow Over European Auto Industry

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/trumps-tariff-threats-cast-shadow-over-european-auto-industry

特朗普总统准备上任之际,他计划对来自中国、加拿大和墨西哥的商品征收关税。这些关税可能引发贸易战,并严重影响欧洲汽车工业,其中依赖汽车制造的中欧和东欧国家尤其容易受到影响。德国是欧洲最大的美国汽车出口国,也容易受到这些关税的影响。 这些关税将影响大众、沃尔沃和 Stellantis 等欧洲重要汽车品牌。塞尔维亚菲亚特克莱斯勒汽车公司 塞尔维亚在南斯拉夫解体后一直在努力恢复,并将因关税而面临进一步的挑战。欧洲汽车行业还面临着来自中国电动汽车制造商的日益激烈的竞争。 特朗普的关税将增加欧洲汽车行业面临的压力,该行业的销量下降,电动汽车补贴也减少。如果欧盟通过关税进行报复,美国和欧洲的消费者成本都可能增加,尤其是对德国庞大的汽车行业造成影响。德国经济研究所预测,对欧盟征收20%的关税可能会使德国经济在四年内损失高达1925亿美元,并对中欧和东欧的汽车制造业产生连锁反应。

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原文

Authored by RFE/RL staff via OilPrice.com,

  • Trump's proposed tariffs on Chinese, Canadian, and Mexican goods could trigger trade wars and severely impact European automakers.

  • Central and Eastern European countries that rely heavily on car manufacturing would be particularly hard hit by these tariffs.

  • The German auto industry, Europe's largest exporter of passenger cars to the United States, is also highly vulnerable to Trump's tariff threats.

As Donald Trump prepares to take office on January 20, Europe’s already battered car industry is bracing for additional headwinds amid the threat of new tariffs from the incoming U.S. president.

Trump has pledged to impose steep new tariffs on goods coming from China, Canada, and Mexico in one of his first acts in office, a promise that could ignite trade wars.

That is bad news for European automakers who have already seen sales and manufacturing decline in top markets like the United States and China.

The potential tariffs would be felt hard not only by leading European car brands like Volkswagen, Volvo, and Stellantis -- the conglomerate that produces Fiat, Chrysler, and Citroen -- but also for the Central and Eastern European countries whose economies rely heavily on making them.

Toma Savic, a former director at Zastava, a Serbian international car manufacturer that was shuttered in 2008, said the tariffs would be a particularly hard blow for operations in the Balkan country.

"This inevitably would lead to the shrinking of production in Europe and mass layoffs," he said.

Zastava later became Fiat Chrysler Automobiles Serbia, which is owned by Stellantis.

Based in Kragujevac in central Serbia, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles Serbia has already been struggling to recuperate its foothold in the European auto industry prior to the breakup of Yugoslavia in the early 1990s when it assembled 200,000 cars annually and exported them to 26 countries.

Germany’s auto industry is also likely to be highly vulnerable to Trump’s promised tariffs, especially given that Europe’s biggest economy is by far the region’s largest exporter of passenger cars to the United States.

European and American carmakers could lose up to 17 percent of their combined annual core profits if the United States imposes import tariffs on Europe, Mexico, and Canada, according to some estimates.

Trump’s Tariff Vision

While Europe was not specifically mentioned in Trump’s first tariff announcement in late November, he took aim at the European Union while on the campaign trail earlier this year and accused European partners of unfair trade practices and stealing American manufacturing jobs.

"They don’t take our cars, they don’t take our farm products, don’t take anything,” Trump said on the campaign trail in October. “They are going to have to pay a big price.”

The U.S. market is the main destination for European passenger cars. Exports amounted to 42.5 billion dollars in 2023, according to Statista, a German online platform that specializes in data gathering and visualization.

In comparison, the value of U.S. vehicles imported to the EU was around 7.8 billion dollars during the same period.

Trump said on the campaign trail in September that he wants German automakers to become "American car companies” and “build their plants here.”

He added that he was prepared to offer low taxes and energy costs to draw more companies to set up manufacturing inside the United States.

In 2016, German carmakers avoided 35 percent tariffs floated by Trump by investing in more production in the United States.

But Trump's new proposed tariffs could make it more costly for European automakers to set up U.S.-based factories.

A Make Or Break Moment

The threat of new tariffs will add to already growing pressures facing the European auto industry as it looks to compete for the future electric vehicle (EV) market that is dominated by Chinese manufacturers.

Earlier this year, the EU imposed duties of up to 35 percent for EVs from China saying that the “unfairly subsidized” cars have given them a market foothold.

Added to this, car sales for EVs across the EU have dipped downward and some governments have repealed subsidies meant to incentivize consumers to buy the cars.

The rise of Chinese companies, such as EV-leader BYD, has also seen Western car brands lose market share inside China at a steady rate, with Volkswagen in particular grappling with declining sales.

Between tougher competition from China, declining sales at home, and new pressure from Trump, many European automakers are facing a bleak outlook.

Back in Kragujevac, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles Serbia is grappling with weak demand, including several fully electric products delayed entirely or produced at tumbling rates.

Jugoslav Ristic, a long-time union official in the car industry in Serbia, said the setbacks are a result of “customs wars and unfavorable business conditions.”

There is also concern that the industry could be further hit by a trade spat if Brussels responds to possible U.S. tariffs. Such an event could increase costs for consumers in both the United States and Europe and particularly hit Germany, the continent’s car behemoth.

The German Economic Institute predicts that if Trump imposes 20 percent tariffs on the EU it could cost the German economy up to 192.5 billion over four years.

Those costs would also have ripple effects in the parts of Central and Eastern Europe that are dependent on car manufacturing.

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