Ekaros 4 hours ago

Free trade. Any products that fulfil local safety standards should be allowed to be sold. Just because USA doesn't want to make cars that fulfil European standard does not mean they should be able to get away with those.

sumedh 4 hours ago

If the US can build safer cars for everyone, the EU will have no objections.

  • ExoticPearTree 4 hours ago

    [flagged]

    • neilalexander 3 hours ago

      EU legislation requires a number of design considerations for pedestrian and cyclist collisions, like specific energy absorption requirements for front-impact and side-impact protection, restrictions on sharp corners/steep angles that could concentrate impact forces, minimum clearance around hard internal structures, mandatory ADAS (automated emergency braking, lane departure warnings) etc. Not saying that US cars are "not safe" in a binary fashion but for the most part these things are either optional or unregulated in the US.

      • ExoticPearTree 2 hours ago

        Yeah, not a fan of cyclists. And it's kind of braindead to have my car break because if I hit a pedestrian somehow it is its job to absorb the impact. Maybe cyclists and pedestrians should be more mindful of their surroundings.

        The EU regulations have killed all the nice things about cars: straight lines, retractable headlights and so on.

    • sumedh 3 hours ago

      Did you even read the article?

kelnos 4 hours ago

Sure you can. I'm not even sure why I need to support this statement. You can have any kind of trade you want.

In the longer term, these sorts of things are governed more by demand than anything else. Sure, some governments might sometimes enact protectionist policies, but if most people in a country think the cars made by their domestic car companies are garbage, they're going to end up with a government that allows cars from other countries in.

sd9 4 hours ago

This is nothing to do with trade.

If region X happily produces and sells rotten meat, no other region is obligated to trade with them. But region X might choose to import non-rotten meat if they want.

ricardobeat 4 hours ago

Because of safety standards? It’s the whole point of the article.

You can absolutely have unidirectional trade, countries produce a different array of goods and these are not bartering deals.

georgefrowny 4 hours ago

If the EU cars aren't "safe enough" for the US then sure. Some of it is political silly buggers and protectionism but at the end of the day countries (or unions of countries) can set their own rules.

If the US wants to sell cars to the EU, they can. Plenty of countries export cars to the EU just fine. It's not the EU's fault that American car manufacturers make dangerous vehicles. It's also not American car manufacturer's fault that European cities and roads are often smaller and Europeans have less appetite for road deaths. But it is their fault if they want to export to that market without making any effort to design suitable cars for it. American exporters aren't granted a God-given right to inflict American standards in the rest of the world.

  • ExoticPearTree 4 hours ago

    How are US made vehicles dangerous?

    • georgefrowny 4 hours ago

      If they don't meet EU safety standards, they are, by definition, legally unsafe for sale in the EU.

      Front sightlines are a common example given for larger pickups and SUVs. Pedestrian outcomes in collisions are also given more weight in the EU standards (which is why you can't buy a Cybertruck).

      American semi trucks are also generally considered unsafe for that reason plus overall length - nearly all EU and UK HGVs are cabover models.

      There's no rule againt US-made vehicles. It's just that many vehicle models that happen to be made and sold in the US don't meet safety requirements in other places.

      You can well argue that EU vehicle standards are excessively strict (many EU residents may agree or disagree on various aspects), but coming at it from "very unfair trade, it's a huge deficit, sad!" angle seems more like simping for car manufacturers then reasonable public safety policy tuning.

      • ExoticPearTree 4 hours ago

        > nearly all EU and UK HGVs are cabover models

        and

        > There's no rule against US-made vehicles.

        It feels very much an anti-US rule to me.