In addition to being full of screens, China now wants its cars to be packed with AI.
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Perhaps, but I spend all day here and online being told y’all want small cars with no AI and no connection and no screens and lots of buttons and then an irresponsible website publishes a “you’re being denied this $10,000 EV” and the car is packed full of AI and screens and spyware and all of a sudden none of those complaints seem to matter anymore.The problem for the USA comes down to this: wine taste on a beer budget. US consumers want want want all the things....then complain when they are expensive. They want: a massively large vehicle, they want high ground clearance, they want a long range, they want all the tech from power-everything to infotainment and lane-assist, they want giant massive roads to drive wicked fast on.
...and then when handed the bill--not only the sticker purchase price, and the cost of insurance, but the cost of maintaining the infra to use it on they complain they cannot afford it.
Yea the costs are high--that is the dispassionate mistress of economics.
Sounds a bit like Stellantis, don't it? But that is companies for you--they all want to win attention as the Newest and Shine-iest.Chinese companies chasing gaudy displays of technology without proper thought to usability and purpose ? Color me shocked
Oh I'm, 100% smol car gang. The Biden and then Trump tariffs ruined my prospects of probably ever getting one.Perhaps, but I spend all day here and online being told y’all want small cars with no AI and no connection and no screens and lots of buttons and then an irresponsible website publishes a “you’re being denied this $10,000 EV” and the car is packed full of AI and screens and spyware and all of a sudden none of those complaints seem to matter anymore.
I ended up with the European Ford Explorer EV
I’m using the Ars comments and social media platform Bluesky as my bellwethers
Cherry‑picking Chinese‑market‑only models like Zeekr (?) for their ridiculous passenger infotainment screens and no buttons seems a bit disingenuous to me, though. All your other concerns from your article are fine otherwise!Perhaps, but I spend all day here and online being told y’all want small cars with no AI and no connection and no screens and lots of buttons and then an irresponsible website publishes a “you’re being denied this $10,000 EV” and the car is packed full of AI and screens and spyware and all of a sudden none of those complaints seem to matter anymore.
Any nation with a minimum wage should enact a tariff on imports at a level specific to eliminate wage arbitrage. Factories keep timesheets and shipping manifests, so it should be relatively easy to ensure that all products sold in a given nation have their labor costs normalized to that nation's minimum wage.Chinese average wages are a quarter of those in the US, and being able to throw more workers at a factory while still keeping overheads lower than your rivals gives Chinese OEMs a cost advantage.
The problem for the USA comes down to this: wine taste on a beer budget. US consumers want want want all the things....then complain when they are expensive. They want: a massively large vehicle, they want high ground clearance, they want a long range, they want all the tech from power-everything to infotainment and lane-assist, they want giant massive roads to drive wicked fast on.
...and then when handed the bill--not only the sticker purchase price, and the cost of insurance, but the cost of maintaining the infra to use it on they complain they cannot afford it.
Yea the costs are high--that is the dispassionate mistress of economics.
Going to add that the Kei cars also come with a much lower tax burden which helps as the charges start to increase when your car gets "old" and is hit with extra penalties.Keis are popular because they're cheap, they're compact - many small roads are much too narrow for a full-sized SUV - and they're convenient for getting around local areas.
The problem there is, you'd be relying on potentially abusive and predatory foreign exporters to honestly and accurately keep and report their books to your tariff authority.Any nation with a minimum wage should enact a tariff on imports at a level specific to eliminate wage arbitrage. Factories keep timesheets and shipping manifests, so it should be relatively easy to ensure that all products sold in a given nation have their labor costs normalized to that nation's minimum wage.
That would go a long way toward eliminating dumping right there.
If you want to compete by having a better supply chain, or better engineering processes, sure. If your core competency is "we don't bother to pay our workers" then you do not get to sell your products in my nation.
Subtract Germany's VAT and incentives (mostly by reduced road tax nowadays), add your state's sales tax (US median is like 4%?). Now you can compare apples to apples. $22,500 by my count, and that's before subtracting any German road tax incentives.That Dolphin at the low level is about 26k USD (converted from euro). That's not cheap.
It drives me nuts to see people gushing over how cheap these things and how we should just go all in on chinese evs when we've seen how this story plays out over and over again.
Flood the market with cheap competition, kill the established players that cant compete on price, and then once the market is cornered raise the price. Rebuilding infrastructure for factories and parts is very very expensive and requires retraining people and is very hard. Once theyre gone it wont come back.
Yes the china redscare is often used as a boogie man used by conservatives but in this case it's just cold hard business.
Would Volvo not qualify as Chinese these days?There is a lot of in-depth useful information here. Not that I would be swayed into buying a Chinese EV but it's always good to know. Rivian, Subaru and Volvo's models fit our comfort, parking and highway needs best.
Perhaps, but I spend all day here and online being told y’all want small cars with no AI and no connection and no screens and lots of buttons and then an irresponsible website publishes a “you’re being denied this $10,000 EV” and the car is packed full of AI and screens and spyware and all of a sudden none of those complaints seem to matter anymore.
No more than McLaren counts as Bahrani. Volvo is headquartered in Sweden and listed on NASDAQ Sweden.Would Volvo not qualify as Chinese these days?
Also you don't want to do that when the US minimum wage hasn't kept pace with the cost of living in 30+ years, and hasn't moved a penny since 2009. That'd be comparing one made-up number (lying foreign competitiors) with another fake number (minimum wage that nobody earns because you'd be homeless at that wage). Effectively useless exercise.The problem there is, you'd be relying on potentially abusive and predatory foreign exporters to honestly and accurately keep and report their books to your tariff authority.
How much more are you prepared to pay--for everything?100% tariffs on Chinese cars? Make it a million %, and apply it to ALL Chinese products.
Then do the same for products from Russia and from North Korea.