Volvo Fires People as Tariffs Bite

As tariffs raise car prices, the next move by manufacturers is bound to be layoffs. Volvo has just announced it will cut 800 jobs at three U.S. locations. The post Volvo Fires People as Tariffs Bite appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

Apr 21, 2025 - 14:12
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Volvo Fires People as Tariffs Bite

American car companies have told Donald Trump that tariffs on cars and car parts will wreck their bottom lines. Ford just told its dealers it will almost certainly raise prices in June to offset the increase in their expenses because of tariffs. Jaguar and Land Rover say they will stop sending cars to the United States. As tariffs raise car prices, the next move for manufacturers is bound to be layoffs. Volvo, which Zhejiang Geely owns, has just announced it will cut 800 jobs at three U.S. locations.

24/7 Wall St. Key Points:

Volvo is not one of the larger luxury car companies with a footprint in the United States. It sold just over 138,000 cars in the United States and Canada last year. Mercedes, Lexus, and BMW are much larger. Volvo has a second U.S. business, heavy-duty trucks, which has been hit hard in the past two weeks.

According to CNN, Volvo announced, “Heavy-duty truck orders continue to be negatively affected by market uncertainty about freight rates and demand, possible regulatory changes, and the impact of tariffs.”

Ford CEO Jim Farley said his company was not immune to the rising costs of tariffs. He commented, “There is no question that tariffs at 25% level from Canada and Mexico, if they’re protracted, would have a huge impact on our industry, with billions of dollars of industry profits wiped out and [an] adverse effect on US jobs, as well as the entire value system in our industry.” American-based car companies face the need for layoffs if their car sales drop due to high prices they have to pass on to consumers.

The administration argues that tariffs will bring back manufacturing jobs to America, and in theory that may be true. However, building new manufacturing facilities to handle extra volume would take years and billions of dollars. The labor cost also needs to be competitive with China and Mexico. That is unlikely, particularly in light of UAW contracts.

If tariffs stay in place, the Volvo layoffs will be part of a much larger trend.

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