The credits encourage manufacturing in the US but foreign car companies say they are discouraging international trade.
A new tax credit for US buyers of qualifying electric vehicles made in North America has ignited the spectre of a trade war. The domestic imperative of the Biden administration and Democrats could collide with the complex realities of globalisation.
Democrats included the credit in the expansive climate and health care policy law passed earlier this month as a way to incentivise domestic battery and electric vehicle production.
But manufacturers in Europe and South Korea, which sell millions of vehicles in the US, have threatened to lodge legal complaints with the World Trade Organization (WTO).
Adam Hodge, a spokesman for the US Trade Representative, said the intent of the tax credit is to boost “US EV manufacturing, infrastructure, and innovation that will help us meet our clean energy goals, reduce costs, and create jobs” and “to reduce our dependence on China” for critical materials.
How the Biden administration handles the allegations brought by foreign governments and manufacturers will demonstrate its position.
It will show whether the president’s international trade position will mirror the Trump administration’s go-it-alone approach, leaving the WTO’s dispute resolution process in disarray.
What is the US’s new tax credit on electric vehicles?
The law includes a tax credit of up to $7,500 (€7,516) that can be used to ease the cost of purchasing an electric vehicle.
But to qualify for the full credit, the electric vehicle must contain a battery built in North America with 40 per cent of the metals mined or recycled on the continent. And those rules are set to become more strict over time, such that only a few American manufacturers could produce vehicles that qualify for the credits.
That has caused anxiety among US carmakers, who say they have ramped up efforts to bolster their supply chains in order to qualify for the credit.
“We are working overtime to localize our supply chains and ramp up production,” said Chris Smith, chief government affairs officer at Ford in a statement last week.
It also has roiled the framework for dealing with the layered matters of international trade.
Earlier this month, when asked about the tax credit, European Commission spokeswoman Miriam Garcia Ferrer said, “we think that it’s discriminatory, that it’s discriminating against foreign producers in relation to US producers,” calling the credits a “new, potential, trans-Atlantic trade barrier.”
“Of course this would mean that it would be incompatible with the WTO,” she said.
Hildegard Mueller, the head of Germany’s automotive lobby group VDA, which represents major manufacturers such as Volkswagen and smaller suppliers, also criticized the measures and has asked the EU to intervene.
“We are critical of the fact that the subsidy is tied to conditions which relate to local value creation and therefore disadvantage products from third countries,” Mueller said.
“The European Commission is called upon to clearly advocate for non-discriminatory support here.”
What is the WTO and how could it get involved?
However, the potential for a World Trade Organization complaint highlights the void left in part by the Trump administration, which blew up the WTO’s appeals body when it blocked the approval of new judges to serve on the dispute resolution panel.
The panel is supposed to have seven judges. But their ranks have dwindled because the United States — under Presidents George W Bush, Barack Obama and Donald Trump — has blocked new appointments to protest the way the WTO does business.
The WTO acts as a high court for international trade issues and has 164 member countries.
Daniel Pruzin, a spokesman for the organization, said it has a policy of “not commenting on matters which are or may be the subject of WTO dispute proceedings,” adding that the WTO has yet to receive communication from any members with an intent to initiate dispute proceedings against the EV tax credit.
Simon Lester, current president of WorldTradeLaw.net, which provides summary and analysis of all WTO reports and arbitrations, said “there are pretty strong claims that various aspects of the statute violate a number of WTO obligations.”
“There are possible defences the US could raise, but the defences are somewhat weak,” he said.
Presidents of both parties in the US have expressed deep scepticism of WTO, but officials from the Biden administration have tried to bolster trade relationships overseas.
One measure of how far the administration will go is whether it will approve new judges. A representative from the White House did not comment on whether the administration intends to approve new judges for the administrative body.
Trade experts are not confident there will be a functioning WTO body in the near future.
“The US has an interest in this situation not to have a ruling against them,” Lester said.
Is the US tax credit discriminatory to foreign EV manufacturers?
Douglas Holtz-Eakin, president of the conservative-leaning American Action Forum said: “there is no question” that provisions in the tax credit plan are discriminatory to foreign manufacturers.
Without a resolution to the electric vehicle tax credit complaints, he said, “this will lead to some sort of retaliation on large US corporations that do business in Europe.”
“This isn’t even a close call, which means the US doesn’t plan to step up and fix the appeals process anytime soon. On a bipartisan basis, leaders have become disenchanted with the WTO because of its inability to put pressure on China,” he added.
Padideh Ala’i, an American University law professor who specializes in trade, said because the WTO has been unable to rein in China for its trade violations, the organization has been seen as ineffective.
“But international rulemaking is important and in the absence of that what are we left with — a nonfunctioning appeals body.”
World trade relationships will now be left to bilateral agreements and negotiations between powerful parties and smaller countries.
“We entered into these arrangements so that we can safeguard peace, so now we are going to find out what the alternatives are without a WTO appellate body.”