Trumps Tariffs and EV Rollback: $2,000 Price Hike and Possible Shift to Chinese Technology for U.S. Cars

The impact of President Trump's tariffs on car buyers is significant, with prices expected to rise by nearly $2,000 per vehicle, according to consulting firm AlixPartners. The firm estimates that automakers will pass on 80% of the $30 billion tariff cost, adding about $1,760 per car, as reported by Bloomberg.

"These tariffs bring a big wall of cost," said Mark Wakefield, AlixPartners' global auto lead. "We see consumers taking the majority of the hit."

General Motors and Ford have already projected tariff-related hits of $5 billion and $2.5 billion, respectively, and plan to offset some of it through price hikes. However, AlixPartners sees a rebound, projecting U.S. auto sales to hit 17 million by 2030.

But the Trump administration's rollback of EV incentives, including the $7,500 consumer tax credit, could have longer-lasting consequences. Without that support, Americans are expected to "follow their pocketbook," Wakefield said, and stick with gas-powered cars.

As a result, AlixPartners has slashed its EV forecast for 2030. They now see battery electrics making up just 17% of U.S. car sales—down from an earlier prediction of 31%. Internal combustion engines, previously expected to fall to one-third of sales, are now projected to hold at 50%. Traditional hybrids are forecast to reach 27%, while plug-in hybrids will make up only 6%.

Wakefield warned that these policy shifts could seriously undercut U.S. automakers in the global EV race, potentially making them reliant on Chinese platforms and technology. "It makes it much more likely that they end up licensing or joint venturing or otherwise using platforms and EV technologies from China," he said.

And while American automakers might still dominate one segment, Wakefield had a biting prediction: "They'll have the world's best V8 engines by 2028. They'll probably also have the world's only V8 engines by 2028."

The future of the U.S. auto industry is uncertain as it faces the double blow of Trump's tariffs and the rollback of EV incentives. It remains to be seen how automakers will adapt to these changes and whether they will be able to compete in the global market.

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Read this article on OilPrice.com for more insights into the impact of these policy changes on the U.S. auto industry and the future of the automotive sector.

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