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Title: Will the Trump tariffs substantially increase the cost of vehicles and stoke inflation?
Source: [None]
URL Source: https://www.americanthinker.com/blo ... icles_and_stoke_inflation.html
Published: Mar 31, 2018
Author: Jack Hellner
Post Date: 2018-03-31 18:58:12 by Justified
Keywords: None
Views: 3398
Comments: 57

It's amazing. Even a topic as dry as tariffs gets the press's bias wheels turning. Here's one example, from Reuters:

Toyota Motor Corp said on Friday U.S. tariffs on imported steel and aluminum would substantially raise costs and therefore prices of cars and trucks sold in America.

"The (U.S.) Administration's decision to impose substantial steel and aluminum tariffs will adversely impact automakers, the automotive supplier community and consumers," the automaker told Reuters.

Toyota added that more than 90 percent of the steel and aluminum purchased for cars built in the United States is sourced from the country.

Substantially? In making this claim, somehow, the reporter did not ask Toyota what the substantial cost increase would be. I would think that would be a valuable piece of information, since the average price of a car or truck today is around $36,000. So I thought I would do some research to find what "substantial" means.

The current price of steel is around $800 per ton, and the price of aluminum is 97 cents per pound. The average car uses around one ton of steel and close to 400 pounds of aluminum. The average truck uses around one and one half tons of steel and just under 400 pounds of aluminum.

So if the price of the steel in a car went up the whole 25%, which it won't, and the price of aluminum went up the entire 10%, the cost would go up by about $240, or less than five tenths of a percent. The cost of a truck would go up around $340. According to Edmunds, the average car loan today is six and a half years. or 78 months, so the average payment would be up around $3 per month because of the tariffs, or 10 cents a day. Since people keep their cars for a long time, the tariffs will add little to overall inflation. Thank goodness Trump gave a big tax cut, which will more than cover that.

Canada is pitching a fit about the tariffs, but the Canadians have many controls on imports from the U.S. Here are a couple of examples.

Canada uses supply-management systems to regulate its dairy, chicken, turkey, and egg industries. The regime involves production quotas, producer marketing boards to regulate price and supply, and tariff-rate quotas (TRQs) for imports. Canada's supply-management regime severely limits the ability of U.S. producers to increase exports to Canada above TRQ levels. Under the current system, U.S. imports above quota levels are subject to high tariffs (e.g., 245 percent for cheese, 298 percent for butter).

Canadians face high provincial taxes on personal imports of U.S. wines and spirits upon return to Canada from the United States.

When the government calculates the growth in the economy, it reduces the growth if there is a trade deficit. That certainly suggests that the overall deficit is bad and that a goal to improve the growth in the U.S would be to reduce the deficit, which is what Trump is trying to do. If Trump just added the tariffs on China, China would just ship the steel to other countries, particularly other countries with free trade agreements with the U.S., and then those countries would ship the Chinese steel to the U.S., so it wouldn't solve the problem of dumping.

The United States has the world's largest trade deficit. It's been that way since 1975. The deficit in goods and services was $566 billion in 2017. Imports were $2.895 trillion and exports were only $2.329 trillion.

President Trump has been handed many significant problems that have built up for many years – and, in many cases, decades. These problems include but are not limited to:

The massive trade deficit, a slow economy, high taxes, too many regulations, North Korea, ISIS, Russia, China, out-of-control health care costs (because of Obamacare), the opioid crisis, the unconstitutional Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), and unchecked illegal immigration as a whole, along with lawless sanctuary cities and states.

Thank goodness President Trump and the people he hired with business experience are used to working on many projects at one time and strive to produce results as fast as possible instead of slogging through the massive bureaucratic process. The tariffs on steel are just one part of it.

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 42.

#1. To: Justified (#0)

Anheuser-Busch

The aluminum used in beer cans is expected to get more expensive once the tariffs go into effect. Anheuser-Busch (BUD) has warned that it could threaten manufacturing jobs in the industry.

The company employes more than 18,000 people in the United States.

Auto parts manufacturers

The Motor & Equipment Manufacturers Association, which represents companies that make vehicle parts in the United States, has said the tariffs will make cars more expensive and could put the many of the more than 800,000 jobs in its industry at risk.

Boeing

The nation's largest single exporter uses aluminum and some steel parts to make planes. Boeing (BA) could also suffer if other countries decide to retaliate against US tariffs by buying planes from competitors like Airbus. The company has more than 140,000 employees in the United States and around the world.

Caterpillar

Making Caterpillar (CAT) construction equipment could get more expensive if steel and aluminum prices rise.

The company employs more than 98,000 full-time workers around the world. About 42,000 are in the United States.

Campbell Soup Company

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross has said that there's 2.6 cents worth of steel in a can of Campbell's soup, and consumers can expect prices to rise less than one cent as a result of tariffs. Campbell's (CPB) responded that "any new broad-based tariffs on imported tin plate steel — an insufficient amount of which is produced in the U.S. — will result in higher prices on one of the safest and more affordable parts of the food supply."

Campbell's has about 18,000 employees.

Craft breweries

Craft breweries, which have been a breakout success over the past few years, worry that future growth will be stunted if beer cans get more expensive due to higher aluminum prices. Oskar Blues, a Colorado-based brewery with operations in North Carolina and Texas, said tariffs would put "a strain on the business."

DowDuPont

An executive at the chemical company told Bloomberg that it might need to start building plants in Canada or Argentina if the cost of construction goes up too much in the United States.

DowDuPont (DWDP) has approximately 98,000 employees.

Ford

Ford (F) uses steel and aluminum in car production. Ford said in a statement that the tariffs "could result in an increase in domestic commodity prices — harming the competitiveness of American manufacturers," though it mostly uses American-made steel and aluminum in vehicles manufactured in the United States.

Ford has about 202,000 employees worldwide.

General Electric

GE (GE) makes jet engines, power plant turbines, trains and other heavy machinery, all of which use steel and aluminum. Higher costs could inflict further damage on a company that already faces serious financial troubles. GE said in a statement that it's monitoring the situation but expects the impact to be "minimal."

GE has about 313,000 employees total. About 106,000 are in the United States.

General Motors

GM (GM) cars contain steel and aluminum, though the company says that more than 90% of the steel it uses to make cars in the United States comes from American suppliers.

It has more than 180,000 workers around the world.

Molson Coors

The maker of Coors Light and Miller Light has said that it makes an "increasing" number of beers in aluminum cans. Rising prices will "likely to lead to job losses across the beer industry," the company said on Twitter.

The company has 17,200 employees globally, about 7,900 of which are in the United States.

Oil companies

Members of the oil industry have warned that Trump's steel tariffs could derail the country's energy boom by raising prices on foreign steel, which oil companies use in drilling and production, as well as in pipelines and refineries.

Canary LLC, a Denver-based oilfield services company that employs about 300 people, said higher costs could force it to lay off up to 17% of its US workers.

Whirlpool

Whirlpool (WHR) recently got a boost when Trump slapped tariffs on imported washing machines. Now it could get more expensive to make household appliances like dryers and refrigerators in the United States as metal costs rise.

Whirlpool has about 92,000 employees.

VxH  posted on  2018-03-31   19:22:21 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: VxH (#1)

Hyper bs from those screwing America.

We will not lose one more job than created. Then we will have people paying taxes instead of being a tax burden. Its a win win win!.

Justified  posted on  2018-03-31   19:32:26 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#42. To: Justified (#3)

This American Metalworking Company Is Already Paying Up to 30 Percent More for Steel Thanks to Trump's Tariffs

Less than a month after President Donald Trump announced new tariffs on imported steel and aluminum, the CEO of an Ohio-based manufacturing company says his business is already paying significantly higher prices for rolls of steel—and that he will have little choice but to pass those costs on to his customers.

Mike Schmitt, CEO of The Metalworking Group, tells Reason that prices for cold-rolled steel have jumped by 18 percent since January, while hot-rolled steel (a less-well-finished and less expensive product) has increased in price by 30 percent.

"The reality is that those are traumatic increases. They are shocks to our system," Schmitt says. "This isn't a level of price increase where you can say 'oh, I'll negotiate a little bit of it.' You have to pass it on."

Deckard  posted on  2018-03-31   21:13:51 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 42.

#44. To: Deckard (#42)

You mean he fatting his pockets claiming his cost went up. I see this stuff in my business.

Fair is fair. Equal treatment by government is the cornerstone of our republic. Tax all people equally. One sided free trade is meant destroy the middle class by bringing in untaxed products.

Justified  posted on  2018-03-31 21:27:09 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 42.

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