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United States weighs hike in tariffs on Chinese EVs -WSJ

Published 12/20/2023, 11:14 PM
Updated 12/21/2023, 03:10 AM
© Reuters. U.S. President Joe Biden discusses the Biden administration economic policies during a visit to the Wisconsin Black Chamber of Commerce in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S., December 20, 2023. REUTERS/Leah Millis

(Reuters) -The Biden administration in the United States is discussing raising tariffs on some Chinese goods, including electric vehicles (EVs), the Wall Street Journal said on Wednesday, citing people familiar with the matter.

China's vehicle exports have grown in recent years, fuelled by overcapacity and slowing domestic demand in the world's biggest auto market, and are expected to rise 25% next year to 5.3 million units, China Merchants Bank International says.

The Journal report follows a request to the administration by a bipartisan group of U.S. lawmakers last month to hike tariffs on Chinese-made vehicles and investigate ways to prevent Chinese firms from exporting to the United States from Mexico.

Chinese automobiles currently face a 25% levy introduced during the administration of former President Donald Trump and extended by his successor.

The U.S. government is debating Trump-era duties on roughly $300 billion of Chinese goods, aiming for early next year to wrap up a long-running review of the tariffs, the paper added.

The Biden administration is also considering lowering tariffs on some Chinese consumer products that officials do not see as strategically important, in addition to the potential increases on clean-energy products, the paper said.

Foreign automakers including Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) also use China as a major export hub.

Lawmakers have said earlier that U.S. automakers are exporting Chinese-made vehicles to the United States, a sign that current import tariffs are insufficient.

China will follow developments closely and take necessary measures to safeguard its legitimate interests, a spokesperson of its foreign ministry told a daily briefing on Thursday.

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The office of the U.S. Trade Representative and the National Security Council did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

Latest comments

We can't have anything affordable. We must massively overpay to protect union wages.
If you raise tariffs on cars but not on parts you’ll have the assembly lines in USA. I suppose that is the purpose of this change
Tariffs on EVs trying to save the planet? Really??
The past adding tarrif policies already failed,,anyway it's us consumers paid almost all tarrif cost.
Of course raise tariffs on our (low cost) competitors. This is why Sean Fain and the UAW weren't worried about raising costs (& prices) on American cars.  Let the American consumer pay the bills. No wonder Joey was on the picket lines, chumming for votes.
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