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AnotherGoodName 6 hours ago

What makes a car ‘made in China’ (therefore over 100% tariffs) vs ‘assembled in the USA’ (therefore no tariffs)?

The battery, engine and everything else is absolutely Chinese made. I don’t know how much assembly there is honestly but i feel the Geely, err i mean Polestar was a little close to that line.

I will say the laws around this indicate just how ridiculous tariffs can be. There’s always some line to press up against and honestly if electric motors, batteries, car bodies and wheels from china have different tariffs to a car as a whole it’s always going to lead to china shipping those parts in an easy to bolt together way to ‘make a car’.

mixologic 5 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Read up on the "chicken tax" for how long the auto industry has navigated weird assemvly games: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicken_tax

walrus01 5 hours ago | parent [-]

I think my favorite part would be where they were unbolting entire seats and feeding them directly into industrial shredders.

"Ford imported all of its first-generation Ford Transit Connect models as "passenger vehicles" by including rear windows, rear seats, and rear seat belts.[1] The vehicles were exported from Turkey on ships owned by Wallenius Wilhelmsen Logistics (WWL), arrived in Baltimore, and were converted back into light trucks at WWL's Vehicle Services Americas, Inc. facility by replacing rear windows with metal panels and removing the rear seats and seat belts.[1] The removed parts were not shipped back to Turkey for reuse, but shredded and recycled in Ohio.[1] The process exploited the loophole in the customs definition of a light truck; as cargo does not need seats with seat belts or rear windows, presence of those items automatically qualified the vehicle as a "passenger vehicle" and exempted the vehicle from "light truck" status. The process cost Ford hundreds of dollars per van, but saved thousands in taxes.[1]"

khuey 5 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Ford ended up paying $365 million (roughly $2200 per van) to settle a lawsuit from the government over that.

bagels 5 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

I wonder if manufacturers are using LLMs to find all the dumb loopholes in the laws that they can.

sublinear 3 hours ago | parent [-]

If the law was that simple, we wouldn't need the rest of the judicial system.

mattas 5 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Reminds me of this.

There's a whole industry around reverse engineering tariff classifications to find ways to minimize all-in manufacturing cost.

For example, let's say you sell air purifiers.

Option 1 is to import an air purifier and pay the 25% tariff (or whatever the actual duty rate is) on air purifiers.

Option 2 is to import a widget that gets classified as a fan (with 5% duty) and import a widget that gets classified as an air filter (with 10% duty), then put them in the same box somewhere in the US.

Both are sold to consumers as an air purifier. But one of the options minimizes total cost to the manufacturer.

3eb7988a1663 4 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Radiolab[0] had a story about this involving "toys" vs "dolls".

  "Dolls," which represent human beings, are taxed at almost twice the rate of "toys," which represent something not human - such as robots, monsters, or demons. As soon as they read that, Sherry and Indie saw dollar signs. it just so happened that one of their clients, Marvel Comics, was importing its action figures as dolls. And one set of action figures really piqued Sherry and Indie's interest: The XMEN, normal humans who, at around puberty, start to change in ways that give them strange powers.

  So Sherry and Indie went down to the customs office with a bag of XMEN action figures to convince the US government that these mutants are NOT human. That argument eventually became a court case that went on for years. 
[0] https://radiolab.org/podcast/177199-mutant-rights
netfortius 40 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Putting the parts in the same box, in the US, may cost more than the tariff for the whole thing being built in China or India.

ifwinterco 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

The solution is to tax the capital account instead (tobin tax) or at the very least put the same tariff on everything.

But politicians can never resist exceptions and carve outs and then the game starts again

AnthonyMouse 4 hours ago | parent [-]

> The solution is to tax the capital account instead (tobin tax)

Isn't that just going to further advantage multinational corporations that don't have to move currency in order to move resources because they're all within the same corporation?

mopsi 5 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

To add to this, sneakers with a barely visible fuzzy fabric bottom are one of the best examples of tariff engineering: https://www.gazetc.com/blog/2010/08/sneaking-through-us-cust...

rtpg 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

the justification given for the ban (provided in other sources) is that Polestar's software stack is made in China. The theoretical spooky thing is China forcing some "evil" software update that stops all the Polestars.

The Volvo distinction is ... I mean maybe the Volvo software stack is in Europe or the US. Maybe it's also in China!

I do not really subscribe to this philosophy but what's going on isn't a "Polestar would be tar riffed" thing. It's an outright "you can't sell em" thing

InsideOutSanta an hour ago | parent | next [-]

I think there's a reasonable argument that modern cars are so full of cameras and other surveillance gear that there should be some rules about where this data is sent and how it's handled.

Unfortunately, this doesn't seem to be that.

rvnx an hour ago | parent [-]

It could be that US would benefit from having a more generic GDPR law rather than individual enforcement.

eps 42 minutes ago | parent | prev [-]

The not-so-theoretical spooky thing is that the car requires an account to operate, and all its activity ends up being linked to a very concrete person, in most of the cases, and that's being vaccumed by China.

It's a perfectly valid concern, obviously. However in the current context of a blatantly corrupted government this might be a squeeze for money or just something done out of spite.