The argument for letting Chinese EVs in
7 min
•Apr 1, 202617 days agoSummary
The episode covers market reactions to Iran-US ceasefire negotiations and oil price volatility, then pivots to examining the economic case for allowing Chinese electric vehicles into the US market. Economist Noah Smith argues that blocking Chinese EVs protects obsolete combustion technology while cutting America off from the battery manufacturing industries of the future.
Insights
- Markets may be overoptimistic about geopolitical deescalation; oil infrastructure damage and Strait of Hormuz vulnerabilities suggest longer-term supply chain disruptions regardless of ceasefire progress
- US tariff protection of legacy automakers is counterproductive because it blocks demand for advanced battery technology that underpins multiple future industries beyond just vehicles
- Physical technology convergence around batteries, chips, and motors means countries that isolate themselves from EV adoption risk falling behind in broader manufacturing competitiveness
- Chinese EV makers like BYD are achieving scale and affordability comparable to Tesla, indicating the technology gap is narrowing and protectionism may delay rather than prevent disruption
Trends
Global shift toward electric vehicles as dominant automotive technology, with non-US markets rapidly adopting Chinese EVsBattery technology becoming critical infrastructure across robotics, appliances, data centers, and energy storage—not just vehiclesConvergence of physical technologies around unified tech stack: batteries, semiconductors, power electronics, and motorsUS manufacturing competitiveness increasingly dependent on participation in advanced battery supply chains rather than legacy combustion engine productionGeopolitical risk premiums in oil markets creating volatility; infrastructure damage and chokepoints (Strait of Hormuz, Bab el-Mandab) extending recovery timelines
Topics
Chinese Electric Vehicle Market PenetrationUS EV Tariffs and Trade PolicyBattery Manufacturing Supply ChainsLegacy Automaker CompetitivenessIran-US Geopolitical TensionsOil Price Volatility and Risk PremiumsEnergy Infrastructure Damage AssessmentStrait of Hormuz Shipping DisruptionsTechnology Convergence in ManufacturingUS Manufacturing Future Positioning
Companies
BYD
Chinese EV maker forecasting 1.5 million vehicle sales outside China this year, comparable to Tesla's global projections
Tesla
Global EV sales benchmark; BYD's international sales target matches Tesla's forecasted global volume
Capital Economics
Economic analysis firm providing expert commentary on oil markets and geopolitical risk premiums
People
Noah Smith
Argues for opening US market to Chinese EVs to build domestic battery manufacturing capacity and future competitiveness
Bradley Saunders
Analyzes oil market dynamics, infrastructure damage, and recovery timelines following geopolitical conflict
Subri Benishor
Hosts the episode and conducts interviews with economists and policy analysts
Quotes
"The reason is basically that our own automakers have decided that electric cars are not the future, and they're not going to make them."
Noah Smith
"We need more demand for batteries. Battery factories will go up and up and up all over America if you have the demand locally from the Chinese electric car companies."
Noah Smith
"Protecting an obsolete technology and keeping out an advanced technology is bad for your manufacturing ecosystem."
Noah Smith
"If we cut ourselves off from the technology of the future, which are EVs, we will be behind in physical technologies. We will be behind in manufacturing."
Noah Smith
Full Transcript