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GM Says New Wave of Tariffs Could Force U.S. Job Cuts

General Motors warned Friday that tariffs being considered by the Trump administration could force the company to scale back its sizable domestic operation at the cost of U.S. jobs.

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By
Tiffany Hsu
, New York Times

General Motors warned Friday that tariffs being considered by the Trump administration could force the company to scale back its sizable domestic operation at the cost of U.S. jobs.

In comments submitted to the Commerce Department, the automaker said that the tariffs, if approved, could drive individual vehicle prices up thousands of dollars, stifling demand.

Last month, President Donald Trump ordered an investigation into whether imported automotive components could pose enough of a national security risk to warrant tariffs of as much as 25 percent.

Several other automakers and manufacturing organizations, including the National Association of Manufacturers, BMW and Volvo, have also submitted comments.

“Increased import tariffs could lead to a smaller GM, a reduced presence at home and abroad for this iconic American company, and risk less — not more — U.S. jobs,” General Motors wrote in its comment.

The tariffs would result in “broad-brush trade barriers that increase our global costs, remove a key means of competing with manufacturers in lower-wage countries, and promote a trade environment in which we could be retaliated against in other markets,” the company said.

General Motors pointed to other potential consequences, including “less investment, fewer jobs and lower wages” for its employees.

“The carry-on effect of less investment and a smaller work force could delay breakthrough technologies and threaten U.S. leadership in the next generation of automotive technology,” the company wrote.

A GM spokeswoman, Dayna Hart, said that the company had no contingency plans calling for job cuts, but that it was “something that could happen.”

“We are still assessing the impact,” she added.

General Motors wrote in its comment that it has 47 manufacturing facilities, 25 service part facilities and 110,000 employees in the United States, where it conducts most of its research and development, design, engineering and other work.

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