this post was submitted on 17 Sep 2024
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Electric Vehicles
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And we've been subsidizing ours too. We just do it differently than straight up handing them money. (Although we've done that before too)
The main issue is that China seems to subsidize BYD quite a bit more than other countries do. In addition, this seems to match China's general policy of finding ways to give its own companies advantages in foreign markets, while limiting the equivalent from other countries
Yes, yes, yes.
But why does the West, which has been technologically ahead the entire time, can't produce a cheap simple EV?
Like sure, China is propping up their shit maybe more than the West is, but why can't we get one small inexpensive simple car?
I mean the tech is still new as well as the point that SSJMarx mentioned. To add to the list of reasons to make expensive version of cars first:
I do expect that over time manufactures will begin to release cheaper EVs over time that are aimed for average consumers.
I'm sorry, but that makes 0 sense.
Not everyone can spend 20k, so let's make 100k cars?
And when China is selling such cheap cars, let's stop them too, because there is no demand?
There is nothing logical about your arguments.
The reason we stop China is not related to supply and demand so much as stopping companies that China has given unfair advantages to. If BYD was making cars without signifcant Chinese subsidies, then yes I would be bothered by these tariffs as well.
The person who buys $100k cars isn't going to be shopping in the $20k car market. This $20k EV already exists as the Nissan Leaf and it sells like shit because people don't really want a stripped-down, barebones car. Teslas' cheapest cars are twice the price and outsell it by several orders of magnitude.
We're stopping China from selling cars here because they're selling $50k cars for $20k which is a big problem for everyone but China.
There is logic to their argument. I think you just don't understand the situation very well.