Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
International

New U.S. auto tariffs to devastate sector, raise consumer costs: industry

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Mar, 2025 01:23 PM
  • New U.S. auto tariffs to devastate sector, raise consumer costs: industry

Canadian auto industry leaders say the latest tariffsannounced today by U.S. President Donald Trump will raise the prices of cars for consumers and devastate the sector

“This is nuts,” said Flavio Volpe, president of the Automotive Parts Manufacturing Association.

“It seems he's bent on doing the things that he's been warned will shut down the American auto sector," he said. 

"And if (Trump) insists on tariffs on Canada and Mexico, his reward will be risking the employment of a million American autoworkers. He either doesn't understand how intertwined we are or doesn't care.”

Trump announced 25 per cent tariffs on all automobile imports effective April 2, which will begin being collected on April 3. 

He said the Detroit Three automakers have to move their parts divisions back to the U.S

Shares of Ford, General Motors and Stellantis all slid in after-hours trading. 

The Canadian and American auto sectors are heavily intertwined — automotive parts can cross international borders up to eight times before a vehicle is finally assembled, said Canadian Chamber of Commerce president and CEO Candice Laing. Tariffs could add thousands of dollars to the cost of that vehicle, she said in a statement.

“The consequences of today’s escalation in this destructive tariff war will not be contained to Canada, as much as the U.S. administration would like to pretend," said Laing. 

"Throwing away tens of thousands of jobs on both sides of the border will mean giving up North America’s autoleadership role, instead encouraging companies to build and hire anywhere else but here," she said. 

"This tax hike puts plants and workers at risk for generations, if not forever."

Canada's largest private-sector labour union agreed, saying it would have a direct impact on Canadian jobs.

"What we saw (Wednesday) are unjustified and unwarranted and potentially illegal tariffs that have been applied on the auto industry in Canada," said Lana Payne, national president of Unifor — which was formed from a merger including the former Canadian Auto Workers union in 2013. She noted autoworkers have been an important part of the Canadian economy for more than a century.

"These are not Donald Trump's jobs to steal. They are not Donald Trump's jobs to take," she told reporters at a press conference in Kitchener, Ont.

Asked how soon layoffs might begin after the tariffs are implemented, Payne said she needed to understand the full details of the tariffs before she could say.

"You have to realize it's compounding tariffs on the autoindustry. We use steel and aluminum to build cars. There's a tariff on that. There's a tariff that will be on finished vehicles, from what we understand, and the parts, the Canadian parts that are in that vehicle will be tariffed. So what will this mean? ... I don't know yet, but what I can tell you is that none of this is good for Canadian jobs and Canadian workers right now."

Trump's executive order doesn't appear to exclude vehicles built under the terms of the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement on trade. He also stated that these tariffs are "permanent." 

David Adams, president and CEO of Global Automakers of Canada, said Trump’s tariff policies fly in the face of promises he’s made about affordability.

"Our perspective has always been that these tariffs really are taxes on the American consumer," he said.

The uncertainty caused by the steady stream of announcements, exemptions, delays and threats is also weighing on the economy, added Adams. 

"One thing that businesses hate is uncertainty," he said. 

The tariffs will lead to widespread shutdowns in the U.S. and Canada, Volpe said. 

“Donald Trump doesn’t care about the wake he leaves in U.S. industry, and I think Canadians and other allies should disavow themselves of the idea that we can plead a case for our industries,” he said. 

Volpe believes Trump won’t understand the damage he’s doing until it’s already done. “He may have to break it before he sees that it’s not working.” 

The steel and aluminum tariffs already implemented are hits on the sector that can at least be absorbed in the short term, said Volpe, but that’s not the case with tariffs on the autosector as a whole. 

— With files from reporter Kyle Duggan in Kitchener, Ont., and The Associated Press

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 26, 2025.

MORE International ARTICLES

Former Indian-American Amazon employee jailed for fraud

Former Indian-American Amazon employee jailed for fraud
Former Amazon employee Rohit Kadimisetty has been sentenced to 10 months in prison with a fine of $50,000 for a fraud and bribery scheme targeting the e-commerce giant's online Marketplace. The US Department of Justice (DoJ) said in a statement that Kadimisetty, 28, of Northridge, California, pleaded guilty to conspiracy in September 2021.

Former Indian-American Amazon employee jailed for fraud

Protests, waning patience test U.S. restrictions

Protests, waning patience test U.S. restrictions
Massachusetts and New York are the latest Democrat-led states to ease mask mandates, despite evidence that the surge in the Omicron variant is not yet over.

Protests, waning patience test U.S. restrictions

Indian descent man sentenced for sexually abusing boy on plane

Indian descent man sentenced for sexually abusing boy on plane
Judge Nancy E. Brasel handed down the sentence to Neeraj Chopra, 41, in a federal court in Minneapolis, acting prosecutor Charles J. Kovats said on Friday. He was found guilty in July of the incident in April 2019 but sentenced only this month.

Indian descent man sentenced for sexually abusing boy on plane

Nagara Foundation halts gurdwara renovation work in Pakistan

Nagara Foundation halts gurdwara renovation work in Pakistan
Satpreet Singh, Director of Ranjit Nagara Foundation, revealed that as per US rules, their foundation has to provide documentation of their expenditure to Internal Revenue Service, Department of Justice, annually which is further updated on the department's site for public or on before May 15, but the Evacuee Trust Property Board (ETPB) office has not provided the requisite documents till date. 

Nagara Foundation halts gurdwara renovation work in Pakistan

British Sikh Association lauds BJP govt for welfare measures

British Sikh Association lauds BJP govt for welfare measures
Amid heightened activities by Khalistanis, the UK Sikh community has started to push back against anti-India forces. At the heart of this push back is Southall in London, which remains among the largest hubs of the Sikh community in the UK and has a distinction of hosting UK's largest and most prominent gurdwaras.

British Sikh Association lauds BJP govt for welfare measures

Omicron causing hospitalisations, deaths worldwide: WHO

Omicron causing hospitalisations, deaths worldwide: WHO
Amid an ongoing resurgence across the world, the global coronavirus caseload has topped 333.5 million, while the deaths have surged to more than 5.55 million and vaccinations to over 9.68 billion, according to Johns Hopkins University.

Omicron causing hospitalisations, deaths worldwide: WHO