Key Takeaways

  • The automotive industry is being shocked by China. Industrial policy has super-charged Chinese firms’ rise to become the main manufacturers and suppliers of electric vehicles (EVs). 
  • As domestic demand has eased and excess capacity has emerged, China has increasingly turned to export markets. 
  • This is not entirely a China story though. Western brands have a prominent role in Chinese exports, complicating the Western policy reaction, particularly in Europe. 
  • The US is determined to keep China out of its domestic market, with a Trump presidency potentially leading to a more aggressive tariff and rules of origin policy. 
  • In contrast, the EU will take a more measured approach as it seeks to remain WTO-compliant and advance its green transition. This approach is however likely to do little to protect its auto supply chain. 
  • Reducing reliance on China remains a Western policy priority, but decoupling the EV supply chain may prove challenging given China’s dominance in the critical minerals and battery production spaces. 
  • Building domestic capacity and new sources of critical raw materials risk amplifying excess capacity. It is unlikely that US and European policymakers have fully understood the cost of decoupling. 

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