The true chaos of the US-EU trade war is found in the nuts and bolts—literally. The struggle of a European motorcycle factory to account for the origin of its smallest components reveals the micro-level dysfunction caused by the United States’ “derivative” products tariff policy.
The macro-level policy involves steep tariffs on goods containing steel. But at the micro level, this translates into an impossible demand for perfect information. As German MEP Bernd Lange described, a motorcycle maker cannot produce a “definitive paper trail” for every single nut, bolt, and washer in its complex assembly.
The problem is that a single bolt, sourced from a global supplier, could contain steel smelted in China. Under the US rules, this could taint the entire vehicle, but verifying the provenance of every tiny part is a task of Herculean proportions.
The penalty for failing this micro-level audit is a macro-level catastrophe: a 200% tariff. This forces the company to make a strategic decision based on its weakest link. Unable to guarantee the purity of its entire supply chain, it over-declares its total metal content as a defensive measure.
This “nuts and bolts” dilemma shows how a broad-stroke trade policy can create absurd and punishing realities for businesses on the ground. It highlights the disconnect between the intentions of policymakers and the practical, complex nature of modern global manufacturing.
The Nuts and Bolts of a Trade War: The Micro-Level Chaos of US Tariffs
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