Canada has automotive manufacturing. Charger and Challenger in Bramalea, Honda in Alliston, GM in Oshawa, Ford engines in Windsor, Stellantis vans and I believe EVs soon in Windsor, Brightdrop EV cargo vans for GM in Ingersoll, Toyota and Lexus in Cambridge and Woodstock… and I fail to see what that has to do with anything .
Now what manufacturing does Australia have? None. So they have no reason to erect tariffs. Thus it’s an entirely free market, where Chinese EVs can prosper, exactly what is not happening in the US.
Canada might have manufacturing, but it doesn’t have its own brands anymore because of the aforementioned reasons. Meaning the bulk of the profits are still sent out if the country.
Canada has automotive manufacturing. Charger and Challenger in Bramalea, Honda in Alliston, GM in Oshawa, Ford engines in Windsor, Stellantis vans and I believe EVs soon in Windsor, Brightdrop EV cargo vans for GM in Ingersoll, Toyota and Lexus in Cambridge and Woodstock… and I fail to see what that has to do with anything .
Now what manufacturing does Australia have? None. So they have no reason to erect tariffs. Thus it’s an entirely free market, where Chinese EVs can prosper, exactly what is not happening in the US.
Canada might have manufacturing, but it doesn’t have its own brands anymore because of the aforementioned reasons. Meaning the bulk of the profits are still sent out if the country.
Brands mean squat. If you have no manufacturing, you have zero reason to implement tariffs.
Brands mean headquarters means profits returning to that country. But it’s all moot because Canada owned the brands AND was manufacturing.
Australia has some brands like Holden but they are just subsidiaries of US companies.