Auto manufacturing industry to ask for 'trade assistance' if tariffs are imposed

"You're probably looking at 30 days."

That's how long it would take before production "grinds to a halt" at automotive assembly plants, parts manufacturers, and other industry businesses on both sides of the border if U.S. President Donald Trump's proposed 25 per cent tariffs on all imported vehicles comes to be.

That timeframe is according to Flavio Volpe, president of Canada's Automotive Parts Manufacturers' Association. Volpe told CBC Radio's Windsor Morning that dealers would feel the squeeze right away, before it trickles down to affect all manufacturing.

"Dealers might make five to 10 per cent on a car. If they start underwater, they won't take the inventory," he said. "If they don't take the inventory, you will see manufacturing halt on this side of the border."

And Jonathan Azzopardi, chairman of the Canadian Association of Mold Makers, would agree.

"Dealers will stop buying Canadian-made vehicles," he said and the country will be forced to increase sales to Europe or Asia. But eventually that will "start to dry up" because the factories were put in place to ship south of the border -- not overseas, adds Azzopardi.

It will mean "a slow death" for Canada's auto manufacturing industry, he said.

Most of the parts used to build the Canadian cars are imported into Canada from the U.S., effectively hurting both countries.

"Every single auto state in the U.S. would be tripped into recession — that's seven or eight major states plus Ontario. For absolutely no reason at all," said ​Volpe.

Volpe, like many others, are watching closely as auto industry leaders descend on Washington to urge politicians not to impose the tariffs.

The discussions come after Trump's administration announced they were considering imposing tariffs on all imported vehicles.

On Thursday, the U.S. Commerce Department will hear from experts on both sides of the debate, including representatives from Ontario and Canadian federal governments. After the hearing, the department will decide on whether to recommend tariffs to the president.

If the tariffs go through, Azzopardi said the auto manufacturing industry will need to get "trade assistance" from the federal government.

"We are innocent bystanders in this trade agreement, so we're looking for [trade assistance] until things level out," he said. The existing steel and aluminum tariffs are already affecting his industry and without that assistance, he said the the industry slow-down will only happen quicker.

Volpe said even Republican senators, such as Orrin Hatch, have criticized Trump's policy.

"I'd love to hear who is for these tariffs, certainly no one who has any interest in prosperity even on the U.S. side," he said.

"There is ideology and populism and then there's sheer madness of sending your country into a recession to prove a point no one understands," said Volpe.

"We are equally as concerned as our friends and partners in Canada are," said Sandy Baruah, president and CEO of the Detroit Regional Chamber.

"We don't see much of a silver lining in any of this activity."

How much would a car cost?

Like Volpe, Baruah sees the immediate impact a 25 per cent auto tariff would mean on sales.

"Take for example the vehicle with the highest U.S. parts content — which happens to be the Toyota Camry of all cars — you'd think the vehicle with the most U.S. content would not be impacted by these tariffs but you would be sorely mistaken," said Baruah.

"Because the parts that go into a Toyota Camry, just like any other U.S.-made vehicle, roughly 25 to 35 per cent of those parts come from other countries."

Baruah said the price of the Camry, for example, would go up about $2,000 - $3,000 overnight.

It's about trade at the heart

Baruah is also concerned about the barrier the tariff would create on one of the busiest trade borders in North America — between Detroit and Windsor, Ont.

"If that border is stymied because of tariffs or other kinds of barriers — as we saw after 9/11 because we had a physical barrier on the border — the economy of both sides are going to suffer greatly," said Baruah.

"And it's going to be the people — the workers — that are going to pay the price."

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