Is there such a thing as a Made in America car anymore?

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There's no such thing as a "Made in America" car anymore. And there hasn't been for years. Cars across the continent are made through an intricate and complex web of companies working together to make cars efficiently and bring down cost for consumers. Undoing that process would cost billions of dollars and take years to rebuild.

Undoing decades of auto manufacturing planning will come with severe costs for the industry

Peter Armstrong · CBC News

· Posted: Mar 28, 2025 4:00 AM EDT | Last Updated: 4 minutes ago

The Peace Bridge connects the United States and Canada, Thursday, Feb. 27, 2025, in Buffalo, N.Y.

The Peace Bridge connects the United States and Canada, on Feb. 27, in Buffalo, N.Y. Despite Donald Trump's slogans, there's no such thing as a 'Made in America' car anymore. And there hasn't been for years. (AP Photo/Lauren Petracca)

Donald Trump says he wants to see more vehicles made in America. It's a handy slogan and might once have been a viable idea.

The problem is there's no such thing as a Made in America car anymore. And there hasn't been for years.

Since Canada and the U.S. signed the Auto Pact in 1965, auto manufacturers have leveraged the comparative advantage in both countries to make the industry more competitive, production more efficient and vehicles more affordable.

Experts say tariffs would effectively undo those advantages almost immediately.

"It's the same Trump nonsense that is not backed by paperwork that is going to hurt [the] American auto industry worse than it will hurt Canada," said Flavio Volpe, head of the Automotive Parts Manufacturers' Association (APMA).

A case study

Any vehicle made in North America is manufactured via a complex web of interconnected supply chains that use raw materials and parts suppliers that span the entire continent.

Consider the rear assembly of a car made in North America.

That graphic was put together by the APMA. It says it's based on its members' actual contracts. Company names were redacted to respect competitive confidentiality.

Each dot represents a different company providing the material or part required to complete the rear assembly.

To break the process down even further, everything starts as raw material in one country, is shaped into a part in another, then moved again to be assembled into a broader component, before finally being assembled and eventually shipped to a customer.

Rubber is processed in Monterrey, Mexico. It's shaped into a connector in Iowa. That piece fits into the control arm assembly made in Brampton, Ont. The control arm is put together as part of the rear suspension assembly in Detroit. The rear assembly is shipped to Windsor, Ont., for final assembly and eventually sold in California.

The new NAFTA

You could draw up a similar chain for each individual part in any car.

The whole process is only doable when those components can move across borders tariff-free.

That was a key component of the renegotiated North American Free Trade Agreement in 2018. When it was announced, Trump heralded the newly signed Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement as a breakthrough for the American auto industry.

"Once approved, this will be a new dawn for the American auto industry and for the American autoworker," said Trump in 2018.

And yet, as he announced his latest tariff salvo, Trump's proclamation essentially declared his own trade deal a failure.

"I am also advised that agreements entered into before the issuance of Proclamation 9888, such as the revisions to the United States-Korea Free Trade Agreement and the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), have not yielded sufficient positive outcomes," wrote the administration.

But undoing the status quo will come with enormous cost.

"No car is truly made in just North America," said Patrice Maltais from the industry association Global Automakers Canada.

He says that continent-wide nature of the intricate supply chain cost billions of dollars and took decades to build.

"You have to basically untangle a lot of those supply chains and put new ones down, and that takes a lot of time and it takes a lot of money."

He says a new manufacturing plant could cost anywhere from $2 billion to $10 billion.

"That's just the plant, then you have to look at all the supply chains for that plant."

Even if the automakers actually agreed to move production to the U.S., it would take years to build.

Tariffs would erode industry, experts say

In the meantime, experts say the industry would be clobbered by tariffs.

"You'll feel it almost immediately," said Jan Griffiths, a former American auto executive and founder of the industry association Gravitas Detroit.

WATCH | Carney announces plan meant to help workers affected by tariffs: 

Carney announces $2B 'strategic response fund' to help workers affected by Trump's tariffs

During a Day 4 campaign stop in Windsor, Ont., Liberal Leader Mark Carney announced that if he's elected prime minister, a $2-billion 'strategic response fund' will be created to help workers affected by tariffs imposed by U.S. President Donald Trump. The fund would help create an all-Canadian network for automobile component manufacturing.

Rather than trying to use tariffs to force change that would cost everyone, she says Trump should offer a viable path forward for Canada, Mexico and the United States.

"If this is about renegotiating USMCA, then let's do it, but let's do it now and let's take the uncertainty out of the system. Businesspeople cannot handle this level of uncertainty," she told CBC News.

But Griffiths says the manufacturing base that once existed in the U.S. "is no longer here." It was long ago replaced by one of the most efficient and most cost-effective manufacturing processes in the world.

Even the threat of undoing that network has already shaken markets, eroded confidence and prompted a nearly unprecedented level of concern among one of the biggest industries on the continent.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Peter Armstrong is a senior business reporter for CBC News. A former host of On the Money and World Report on CBC Radio, he was previously a foreign correspondent and parliamentary reporter for CBC. Subscribe to Peter's newsletter here: cbc.ca/mindyourbusiness Twitter: @armstrongcbc

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