View Single Post
Old 12-06-2018, 09:36 AM  
Bladewire
StraightBro
 
Bladewire's Avatar
 
Industry Role:
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Monarch Beach, CA USA
Posts: 56,232
Volvo freezes Hiring at South Carolina plant, moving production to China - tarriffs



But Trump told us the tarriffs have stopped... Hhhhmmm

Trump told us we wouldn't lose any Manor manufacturing jobs to China.

Trump said he was bringing manufacturing back to America so why are all these factories closing then?

Volvo freezes hiring at new plant, moving production to China because of Trump's tariffs

Trump’s ill-advised tariffs have already prompted the U.S. government to bail out farmers, particularly soybean farmers in North Dakota. In recent years, 99 percent of North Dakota's soybeans were sold to China. That market has dried up completely as China has turned to other countries, including a record purchase from the Russians.

Now automakers are sounding the alarm. Ford announced massive layoffs and a company reorganization, in part because of auto tariffs. And Volvo, which opened a brand new plant in South Carolina in June 2018, announced a slowdown in hiring for the plant and may be moving a good deal of production overseas. From USA Today:

Volvo's new South Carolina plant, which opened in June, is gradually ramping up to produce the S60 sedan. In 2021, the plant will begin assembling the Volvo XC90 SUV. Once it's making both models, the plant will ship about half of its vehicles to foreign markets, according to Volvo's original plan.

But if the U.S. dispute with China isn't resolved soon, those plans could be changed, too.

"We ... thought Charleston could build cars for China," Samuelsson said. "That will not work."

Instead, he said, the company is making plans to build the S60 in China for sale to customers there. Volvo is owned by Chinese automaker Geely.

So far, Trump’s tariffs are making Chinese manufacturing stronger. As CNBC notes, SUV production had been on the rise, with China being the No. 1 buyer of vehicles assembled in the USA.

BMW, the largest exporter of American-made vehicles has been planning to boost output of utility vehicles from its Spartanburg, South Carolina plant with the launch of its new flagship, the X7 SUV — many of them bound for China.

Volvo, meanwhile, had earmarked about half of the vehicles it will produce at its new Charleston, South Carolina plant for export, many of those also bound for Chinese consumers.

But with tariffs at 40 percent, analysts have measured a sharp slowdown in demand for American made vehicles.

Will the tariffs cause a drop-off in sales and prompt Volvo, BMW, and Mercedes-Benz to pull back manufacturing—or pull up stakes in the USA altogether?
Bladewire is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote