UK should put 25% tariff on Teslas - then Musk can go crying to his buddy about what a cock up he's made.
Sounds only fair to me...
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UK should put 25% tariff on Teslas - then Musk can go crying to his buddy about what a cock up he's made.
I'm optimistic that the UK and US will make a deal so that those of us with a 2025 Emira order can focus on the car, not tariffs.
The UK already puts 10% tariffs on US cars and 20% for VAT - long before Musk came along.UK should put 25% tariff on Teslas - then Musk can go crying to his buddy about what a cock up he's made.
Sounds only fair to me...
Yes I know - the VAT is irrelevant, almost everything has 20% VAT (including the Emira - £15,207 in my case).The UK already puts 10% tariffs on US cars and 20% for VAT - long before Musk came along.
Elon is getting a return on his $300 million "investment". Teslas are manufactured in the US.
After just having been passed in the last lap, Elon has now got BYD effectively disqualified. BYD sales just topped Tesla, and was a threat to Tesla in the US, but now boy genius has end run that.Elon won't see the 25% tax - the US government will.
And I expect that it would, due to sentiment, lead to less sales in the UK.
They aren't being forced. Its just that cars from other countries are now going to cost more to get into the US so either manufacturers will have less margin on them or they will be less competitive on cost when put against American made cars. If an American wants a Japan made Lexus they are going to still get it. I imagine that cars like Ferraris will just cost more and trucks like a Silverado will start being built in America.The fact that the USA imported half of its car sales last year tells you that people don’t want to be forced to buy American cars, just like British people don’t want to be forced to buy British built cars etc.
I’m pretty sure (on the whole) that what’s going on is not what the Americans voted for.
Last night I decided I'm not going to venture down the 'buy an Emira' road. F** Trump and he and Elon's baby tantrums. GL guys, maybe in four years I can think about it again lol.
Jerome
When I ordered, I was given the two page Lotus USA pricing PDF and I have thought that there was a strong chance for those of us with orders in before the tariff announcement would be bound to the MSRP pricing we agreed to. However, I don't see the tariffs as being permanent, it's a negotiating tactic and the UK is negotiating with the US government now to avoid the tariff increase.Picked mine up from the dealer yesterday, hours before the tariffs were announced. But I suspected they were coming, so I had started asking around.
As far as I understood, when I put down my deposit in October, I signed a sales agreement that said I would pay MSRP of $103,000, or some such. The chain of ownership is Lotus UK, to Lotus USA, to the dealer, to me. Tariffs are paid by Lotus USA, the importer, and are part of the MSRP. Since I have a contract, and have given them a deposit, that's it. They are required to sell me the car for the price listed on that contract. THey do not have the option of backing out, or of increasing the price.
For orders going forward, I'm sure they will be increasing MSRP to reflect the increased tariffs, but for cars ordered before tariffs and delivered after tariffs, I think Lotus just has to take the loss.
While building cars in the US is one way out of this, the other is to get European governments to drop their import duty and VAT on American made cars. Right now, the number of American made cars that are shipped to Europe is a way fewer than the number of European cars shipped to the US, so dropping the European import duty and VAT is a lot less money than paying the extra 25% on US bound cars.
What’s equalization? When there’s no trade deficit with other countries? That might be a while when you are the richest country in the world.My V6 order was accepted by the factory March 6th. Deposit was placed and suspect they will stick with contract based on MSRP build at that time. That said, I also don't believe the tariffs will be permanent as the administration is wanting equalization.
Shouldn't you at least wait and see what the actual impact is on Emira cost before you rage quit on it?Last night I decided I'm not going to venture down the 'buy an Emira' road. F** Trump and he and Elon's baby tantrums. GL guys, maybe in four years I can think about it again lol.
Jerome
Shouldn't you at least wait and see what the actual impact is on Emira cost before you rage quit on it?
He's referring to an equalization in tariffs. The UK applies a 10% tariff on cars imported from the US. On top of the 10% tariff, a 20% Value Added Tax (VAT) is levied on the total value of the car at the point of entry, which includes the car's cost, shipping, insurance, and the tariff itself. For example, a $30,000 U.S.-made car would incur a $3,000 tariff, bringing the taxable value to $33,000, then add $6,600 in VAT, making the total landed cost $39,600 before other fees (like registration). It seems reasonable that we would charge them the same.What’s equalization? When there’s no trade deficit with other countries? That might be a while when you are the richest country in the world.