NAFTA math may not add up to more U.S. auto jobs
Send a link to a friend
[May 14, 2018]
By Nick Carey
DETROIT (Reuters) - Trump administration
demands in NAFTA trade negotiations meant to push auto jobs back to the
United States may not be enough to spark a shift in where automakers
build cars and trucks.
New math to determine what qualifies as vehicle content, what limits
apply to allow tariff-free auto imports and how long companies would
have to comply under a new NAFTA agreement will likely not move the
needle for Detroit automakers in particular, industry executives and
supply chain experts said.
Automakers are unlikely to uproot billions of dollars of investments in
plants and supply chains. And those that cannot comply with standards
for passenger cars could simply pay tariffs of around $800 to $900 per
vehicle and buy low-cost parts from Asia to offset the cost, industry
experts said.
"Broadly speaking the (tariff) increase isn't big enough to make a
wholesale change," said Mark Wakefield, head of the North American
automotive practice for consultancy AlixPartners. "No one is likely to
shut down an active factory in Mexico and build a new one to replace
that in the U.S."
Tough U.S. proposals on autos are meant to bring back U.S. manufacturing
jobs and central to the Trump administration's approach to renegotiating
the North American Free Trade Agreement between Canada, Mexico and the
United States.
General Motors Co, soon to be the only Detroit Three automaker building
pickup trucks in Mexico, is confident it could comply with content
requirements for trucks the United States proposes without shifting
production, a person familiar with the company's plans said.
(Graphic: https://tmsnrt.rs/2IgOECU)
But GM's Mexican-made trucks already have a significant share of their
value, such as engines, produced in the United States at United Auto
Workers union-represented factories, and GM would get another boost if
it is allowed to tally engineering done in Michigan.
GM is retooling a high-volume factory to build a new generation of large
Chevrolet and GMC pickups in Silao, Mexico. Pickup trucks that do not
have enough U.S. or North American content under NAFTA rules could be
hit with a crippling 25 percent tariff.
Last year GM churned out more than 400,000 large pickup trucks from
Silao, more than 40 percent of its 2017 U.S. pickup truck sales.
Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV Chief Executive Sergio Marchionne said on
Friday a revised treaty could prompt FCA to "redirect" some Mexican
production but would not cause it to further dial back its presence in
Mexico.
In January FCA had said it would shift production of heavy-duty pickup
trucks from Mexico to Michigan in 2020 to reduce the profit risks should
the United States pull out of NAFTA.
Senior U.S., Canadian and Mexican officials on Friday ended a week of
talks without a deal to modernize NAFTA, agreeing instead to resume
negotiations soon, ahead of a deadline next week.
RUBIK'S CUBE OF RULES
The United States wants 40 percent of the value of light-duty passenger
vehicles and 45 percent of a truck's content to be built at hourly wages
of $16 to qualify for tariff-free import from Mexico.
[to top of second column] |
Ford and Lincoln vehicles are parked outside the Oakville Assembly
Plant in Oakville, Ontario, Canada, November 6, 2016. REUTERS/Chris
Helgren/File Photo
Those demands are aimed at preserving relatively higher-wage U.S. and Canadian
production and pressuring Mexico's low auto wages.
Mexico wants 70 percent of a vehicle's content to be made within North America,
less than the 75 percent U.S. negotiators propose.
Automakers that do not comply with tougher U.S. or North American content and
wage rules, if adopted, could face 2.5 percent tariffs on cars or sport utility
vehicles shipped to the United States from Mexico. That may be a level of pain
they can live with.
Automakers producing sedans, SUVs and crossovers in Mexico include Ford Motor
Co, Toyota Motor Corp, Mazda Motor Corp, Nissan Motor Co Ltd, Honda Motor Co Ltd
and Volkswagen AG <VOWG_p.DE>.
The U.S. proposal would allow automakers to count salaries for engineering,
research, sales, software and product development jobs, a provision favoring
Detroit automakers versus foreign brands.
And companies would have two, four or nine years to comply, depending on the
specific condition involved.
Still, some automakers are more of a question mark, especially when it comes to
trucks. Toyota plans to expand production in Mexico of its Tacoma pickup trucks,
part of a realignment of its North American manufacturing that includes a new
$1.6 billion assembly plant in Alabama.
It also makes Tacomas in San Antonio, Texas, so could in theory switch
production. The automaker declined to comment.
And the Trump administration proposals could complicate matters for electric
vehicles and self-driving cars automakers want to build in Mexico. The U.S.
proposals call for 75 percent of an electric or autonomous vehicle's value to be
made within North America to avoid tariffs.
Since much of those vehicle's value can come from batteries made overseas, that
means automakers must make up for the content largely on the human side.
At nine years, electronic vehicles are subject to the longest period until they
must comply.
"EVs and AVs have so much electronic content and there is no electronics
industry here," said Kristin Dziczek of the Center for Automotive Research in
Ann Arbor, Mich. "Nine years is not enough to build up an electronics industry
to that scale."
(Reporting By Nick Carey; Editing by Meredith Mazzilli)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|