Auto duties may kill American jobs
Hyundai Motor Co鈥檚 labor union said yesterday that steep auto tariffs the US is considering could cost tens of thousands of American jobs, echoing concerns of the global auto industry as spiraling trade conflicts between the US and other major economies heat up.
The labor union at South Korea鈥檚 largest auto company said in a statement that if President Donald Trump goes ahead with imposing 25 percent auto tariffs, it will hurt Hyundai鈥檚 US sales and jeopardize some 20,000 jobs at a Hyundai factory in Alabama.
The labor union, which has 51,000 members in South Korea, said its contracts with Hyundai Motor mandate Hyundai to shut down overseas factories first before closing its plants in South Korea in the event that restructuring becomes inevitable.
鈥淚f South Korean car exports to the US get blocked and hurt sales, the US factory in Alabama that went into operation in May 2005 could be the first one to be shut down, putting some 20,000 American workers at risk of layoffs,鈥 the statement said. The union said it expects South Korea to win an exemption from auto tariffs.
The union also said that South Korean carmakers were already penalized during the renegotiations of the bilateral trade agreement.
Seoul and Washington agreed to postpone the removal of tariffs on Korean pickup trucks by another 20 years, a measure that the auto industry was unhappy with but won South Korea an exemption from US steel tariffs.
Hyundai Motor is the world鈥檚 fifth-largest automaker along with Kia Motors.
The US Department of Commerce is investigating whether auto imports pose enough national security threats to justify tariffs.
While there are views that the threat of auto tariffs is a negotiating ploy, there are also concerns that the Trump administration could deliver on the threats.
The move has already met pushback from global automakers.
The Association of Global Automakers, a coalition representing major global automakers including Toyota Motor Corp, Volkswagen AG, BMW AG and Hyundai Motor Co, warned last month that high tariffs on imported vehicles and auto components could slash hundreds of thousands of jobs in the US auto sector and dramatically raise vehicle prices for consumers.
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