A Modest Proposal: Balance Trade By Auctioning VINs

Jack Baruth
by Jack Baruth

Even the most casual of TTAC readers will have noticed that we frequently feature stories about the strength of the Chinese economy and the increasing importance that China has to automakers everywhere. This afternoon I was actually standing on the factory floor of a noted “transplant” automaker and I found myself wondering: Is it too late for the United States to follow the “Chinese way” to create more opportunities for domestic vehicle production?

WARNING: Do not read any further if you are easily enraged by protectionism…

The factory I was standing in this afternoon was built by government intervention just as much as it was built by Ohio construction workers or a Japanese board of directors. In 1981 the United States Government bullied Japan into accepting a “cap” of 1.68 million Japanese-built cars into the United States annually. This program persisted, in one form or another, until 1994. Don’t confuse this with the “chicken tax” which applies to imported trucks, by the way.

The short-term impact of this agreement was to constrain the supply of popular Japanese cars. The “Additional Dealer Profit” sticker became common at Honda, Nissan, and Toyota dealerships. Subaru and Mitsubishi, neither of which sold terribly competitive vehicles at the time, found their fortunes buoyed by the plain fact that they were permitted to bring in some Japanese cars and that buyers who couldn’t afford the Honda ADP (which was often 20% of sticker or more) went to their local Subaru or Mitsubishi dealer instead. This is plain supply and demand, and in this case it worked just like it works in the Economics 101 textbooks which, to my knowledge, have never been perused by the average Internet car-forum reader.

The Big Three Japanese automakers had already planned some United States auto production due to concerns about the yen’s increasing strength, but the VRA forced their hand and pretty soon everybody who could afford to build a US plant had done so. Today, foreign-owned, US-located automobile plants produce as much as two-thirds of the “import cars” sold in this country. Even if you don’t like “big government” or economic interventionism, it’s hard not to agree that:

a) Domestic automakers were going to lose that market share anyway, so


b) They might as well lose it to companies which at least assemble in the United States.

Meanwhile, Ford, GM, and Chrysler have fled to Canada and Mexico. General Motors, in particular, seems to be on a crusade to have as much of each car as possible built in China. And speaking of China… only a very optimistic person would expect that China will not eventually enter the United States market with cars that meet the needs of buyers. This could create a situation where even the “foreign” automakers are forced to move production to China, the same way that the computer business became almost exclusively Chinese once Michael Dell started that particular race to the bottom.

What to do?

My solution, offered up for discussion, is an annual foreign VIN auction. It works like so:

Every year, the United States Government will auction off a fixed number of “foreign” VINs, without which an automobile may not be legally operated on most public roads. Any automobile with a final assembly point outside the United States, or any automobile with a domestic content percentage below (pick your favorite number here, perhaps 75%) must obtain a VIN from the auction in order to be sold in this country.

Automakers will submit sealed bids for the number of VINs they wish to purchase. So… for a mini-example, let’s say that:

  • Bugatti bids $10,000 for 1000 VINs
  • Porsche bids $3,000 for 15,000 VINs
  • Ford bids $1,200 for 300,000 VINs
  • Hyundai bids $1,000 for 200,000 VINs
  • Toyota bids $500 for 500,000 VINs

If the “cap” is 500,000 VINs (which it obviously would not be):

  • Bugatti gets all their VINs and pays $10M
  • Porsche gets all their VINs and pays $45M
  • Ford gets all their VINs and pays $360M
  • Hyundai gets 184,000 VINs and pays $184M
  • Toyota gets none.

The real math would be considerably more complicated. However, this scheme would do a few things:

  • Exotic cars would be unaffected in real terms
  • It would introduce a balancing cost to offset the cost savings of building cars in countries which practice currency manipulation or where the daily wage is below certain standards
  • It would help balance some of the costs of conforming to United States environmental regulations, thus helping the air and water stay cleaner in the long run
  • It would encourage automakers to build cars where they are sold without the draconian “50:50” regulation of China’s market
  • It would encourage domestic manufacturers to produce cars domestically

What would the government do with the money? The same thing it always does: waste it. Who cares what they do with it? My suggestion: use it to fund unemployment benefits. The purpose isn’t to give the government more money. Instead, we want to do what the VRA did in 1981: encourage people to build cars here in the United States, where manufacturing jobs are kind of scarce.

There are certainly some objections to my evil plan. I have helpfully demolished them below.

This just raises the cost of cars for the consumer! In the short term, yes. In the long run, it increases the chances of the consumer having a job. Henry Ford, robots, you know the drill.

Other nations will retaliate with their own trade sanctions! What are we selling, as a nation, to other countries? Airplanes, motor vehicles (most of which are made by transplant automakers), industrial chemicals, and food. How much of it are we selling? Not a lot. The value of just the automobiles, automobile parts, and electronic devices we import from other nations is greater than our total exports. In other words: So. Freakin’. What.

What about NAFTA? Amend it, wipe it out, whatever. I don’t see what NAFTA has done for the United States. I thought it would lead to cheap Mexican weed, but I am told by the people who consume such plants that all the Mexican stuff is “schwag” and the “chronic” comes from good old American hydroponic facilities.

I don’t want my car made by American workers. I do web design in Sausalito for a living and I am engaged in a personal Kulturkampf against the American working class, to which I feel superior, and that includes my parents, who were factory laborers who gave up their retirement to send me to UC. Please feel free to walk into the ocean and not come back.

Any questions?

Jack Baruth
Jack Baruth

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  • Dynamic88 Dynamic88 on Oct 02, 2010
    Figure out which of those differences are crucial to economic success and start fixing things. We can't even do that. We live in a time when people are entitled to their own opinions, and their own facts. We'd never be able to agree on what is actually crucial to economic success.
  • TomH TomH on Oct 02, 2010

    Opening with a Brief History of VRA it's hard to imagine coming up with the conclusion that a VIN Lottery is a good idea. The 500K cap is a form of hyperbole (Yeah, I know you caveated it in the article, but it set up a completely unrealistic scenario, the number would be in the mid millions.) and ignores the historical foreign/domestic mix. (Then again, given this administrations intentional ignorance of the US auto industry, you may be on track.) At a minimum you have to remember one of the key takeaways from the VRA experience: You can't legislate against greed and stupidity. (i.e. Do you really think the old Big 3 would have fared any better in the Vin Lotto scenario?)

  • Lichtronamo Watch as the non-us based automakers shift more production to Mexico in the future.
  • 28-Cars-Later " Electrek recently dug around in Tesla’s online parts catalog and found that the windshield costs a whopping $1,900 to replace.To be fair, that’s around what a Mercedes S-Class or Rivian windshield costs, but the Tesla’s glass is unique because of its shape. It’s also worth noting that most insurance plans have glass replacement options that can make the repair a low- or zero-cost issue. "Now I understand why my insurance is so high despite no claims for years and about 7,500 annual miles between three cars.
  • AMcA My theory is that that when the Big 3 gave away the store to the UAW in the last contract, there was a side deal in which the UAW promised to go after the non-organized transplant plants. Even the UAW understands that if the wage differential gets too high it's gonna kill the golden goose.
  • MKizzy Why else does range matter? Because in the EV advocate's dream scenario of a post-ICE future, the average multi-car household will find itself with more EVs in their garages and driveways than places to plug them in or the capacity to charge then all at once without significant electrical upgrades. Unless each vehicle has enough range to allow for multiple days without plugging in, fighting over charging access in multi-EV households will be right up there with finances for causes of domestic strife.
  • 28-Cars-Later WSJ blurb in Think or Swim:Workers at Volkswagen's Tennessee factory voted to join the United Auto Workers, marking a historic win for the 89- year-old union that is seeking to expand where it has struggled before, with foreign-owned factories in the South.The vote is a breakthrough for the UAW, whose membership has shrunk by about three-quarters since the 1970s, to less than 400,000 workers last year.UAW leaders have hitched their growth ambitions to organizing nonunion auto factories, many of which are in southern states where the Detroit-based labor group has failed several times and antiunion sentiment abounds."People are ready for change," said Kelcey Smith, 48, who has worked in the VW plant's paint shop for about a year, after leaving his job at an Amazon.com warehouse in town. "We look forward to making history and bringing change throughout the entire South."   ...Start the clock on a Chattanooga shutdown.
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