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UK car firms to meet government over Trump tariffs

Faisal Islam & Tom Espiner
Economics editor & BBC business reporter@faisalislam
Getty Images US President Donald Trump in the Oval office wearing a blue jacket with white shirt and dark tie.Getty Images

British carmakers will meet ministers on Friday morning to discuss their response to US President Donald Trump's placing 25% tariffs on car imports from next week, the BBC understands.

The UK government is trying to negotiate exemptions from a wide range of US import levies due to come into force at midnight on 3 April.

Some car companies believe it is now too late to delay the measure, and instead want to start discussing support options.

US tariffs could have a huge impact on the UK economy, with the government's official forecaster estimating that in a worst case scenario trade taxes could reduce economic growth by 1% and wipe out Rachel Reeves's £9.9bn headroom against her debt rules.

Government sources said there is "still all to play for" in negotiations over 25% tariffs placed on car imports into the US ahead of next week.

The UK has said it will "not be jumping into a trade war" with the US. Treasury minister Darren Jones said the UK has to take a "different approach" to other countries when it comes to negotiating tariffs with the US.

Jones said "there is no easy answer" and there are "complicated issues" to be discussed.

The UK response is in contrast with other nations such as Germany which has said it "will not give in" and urged Europe to "respond firmly" to the taxes.

In its report on Wednesday's Spring Statement, the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR), said if "global trade disputes escalate to include 20 percentage point rises in tariffs between the USA and the rest of the world", it could reduce economic growth by as much as 1%.

The OBR says that would more or less wipe out the headroom the government is predicted to have by 2029-30, reducing it "to almost zero".

'Significant threat'

Car firms across in a range of countries saw their share prices fall sharply following Trump's tariffs announcement.

This included US automotive-makers such as General Motors, Ford and even Tesla, which is owned by major Trump ally Elon Musk.

Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell, said the tariffs come at "a very difficult time for the industry" with UK car production falling 12% in February compared to the year before.

"Consumer confidence is on edge, we know it's a highly competitive market, and even electric vehicles aren't perhaps quite selling as quickly as hoped," he said."

Ineos Automotive, a start-up carmaker, told the BBC the tariffs are a "significant threat" since the US is its biggest market and its manufacturing is based in the European Union (EU).

Ineos chief executive Lynn Calder said she was "hugely frustrated" that EU politicians had "sat on their hands" and "not come to the negotiating table" with Trump.

"Mr Trump was talking very early in the year about reciprocal and fair tariffs," she said. "There was a deal to be done here, there was a win-win solution."

"I think we're at a situation right now where the EU decides whether it wants an automotive industry or not," she added.

Trump has used powers designed to avert national security threats to levy the tax.

An initial wave of tariffs on cars are due to come into force on 3 April, with import taxes on parts following a month later.

Vehicles are the UK's biggest export to the US, totalling 101,000 last year worth £9bn.

The industry is likely to ask for a support package from the UK government to manage the disruption.

The government is already consulting on changing the mandate for zero electric vehicles, which could end up costing UK manufacturers and subsidising importers such as Tesla, which is controlled by key Trump ally Elon Musk.

Other countries such as France and Canada have vowed trade retaliation against the US, with Canada's new prime minister Mark Carney - the former governor of the Bank of England - saying his country would "fight" and that the longstanding Canada-US relationship is "over".

Only a handful of ministers and officials know the content of the UK's talks with the US administration, which are believed to be about the whole package of tariffs, not just the car sector.

While progress has been made, one negotiator said it will all come down to Trump.

Earlier this week he insisted there would be no carve-outs for car imports, but deals are being done across the globe over wider so-called "reciprocal tariffs" expected next week.


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