
U.S. trade policy has devastated the Canadian auto industry and pushed the country to reach an agreement that will make it easier for Chinese companies to sell cars there.
Canada’s decision this month to give Chinese carmakers a toehold in the country’s car market may be an ominous development for U.S. automakers that are already struggling to stay relevant outside North America.
General Motors and Ford Motor — the two largest U.S.-based car manufacturers — have been steadily losing customers in Asia, Europe and Latin America, as Chinese carmakers have gained ground. Now Canada plans to lower tariffs on a limited number of Chinese-made vehicles, potentially giving companies like BYD, SAIC or Geely a small but significant presence on the United States’ northern border after already building a thriving business in Mexico and much of Latin America.
If they lose significant ground to Chinese companies in Canada, Mexico and other countries where they once dominated, Ford and G.M. could gradually become niche manufacturers, said Erik Gordon, a professor at the Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan. They will end up primarily making and selling large pickup trucks and sport-utility vehicles favored by many Americans but that tend to sell less well in much of the rest of the world.
Hey Grok! What is the average tariff faced by US automakers in Asian nation markets?
From available data on applied import duties for passenger automobiles (primarily from sources like World Population Review’s 2026 country rankings, WTO profiles context, and industry reports):
- Japan: 0%
- South Korea: ~10%
- China: ~25%
- India: ~125% (high-end or standard; recent reductions to ~70% for some categories)
- Indonesia: ~40%
- Malaysia: ~30%
- Philippines: ~30%
- Thailand: ~80%
- Vietnam: ~70%
The deal Mark Carney did with China will cause 100,000's of job losses. pic.twitter.com/rwxc1MLlOo
— Ivano Defazio 🇨🇦🇮🇹🇺🇸 (@DefazioIvano) January 24, 2026
UPDATE:
"The last thing the World needs is to have China take over Canada. It’s NOT going to happen, or even come close to happening! Thank you for your attention to this matter." – President DONALD J. TRUMP pic.twitter.com/3E435v2Yq8
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) January 24, 2026
