Why America Hit the Brakes on Electric Cars

Just last month, on September 30, 2025, a key federal tax credit worth up to $7,500 vanished from the books. This move, pushed through by President Donald Trump and Republican leaders in Congress, has experts warning that the US is sliding further behind in the race for cleaner cars.

It's a twist that leaves you wondering how did the land of innovation end up watching from the sidelines?

Let's rewind a bit. Back in 2022, the Inflation Reduction Act kicked things off with that generous subsidy, aiming to make EVs more affordable and spark a boom in green tech. For a couple of years, it worked. Sales climbed steadily, hitting about 8.5% of all new car buys in the US by mid-2025. But then came the shift. In July 2025, Trump signed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act during a White House picnic, rolling back those incentives along with stricter emissions rules from states like California.

Automakers like Ford and General Motors had ramped up production. GM even doubled its EV sales in early 2025 but now they're scrambling. Honda, for one, just announced in September it'll stop making its Acura ZDX electric SUV in Tennessee by year's end, citing tough market vibes.

Overseas, the story couldn't be more different. In China, nearly half of new cars sold in 2024 were electric, with over 10% of all vehicles on the road now running on batteries. The International Energy Agency's Global EV Outlook, released in May 2025, revealed a harsh truth: global EV sales topped 17 million last year, grabbing 20% of the market. Europe hit one in five sales, and places like Norway are on track to go almost fully electric by December 2025.

Chinese brands like BYD and Changan aren't just dominating at home, they're popping up everywhere, from Caribbean islands to emerging markets in Asia and Latin America. Low-cost models and steady government backing keep the momentum rolling there.

So why does this sting for the US? Without that tax break, experts from Berkeley, Duke, and Stanford forecast a 27% drop in EV registrations next year. Overall car sales might dip 2% in 2026, hurting jobs in places like Detroit. Tesla's Elon Musk has grumbled about the uncertainty, while Nissan's Meunier flat-out called October 2025 a "collapse" for the market.

Certain states may introduce their own benefits, and dedicated fans will continue to purchase. However, for the time being, the US is struggling with a setback while trying to move quickly.

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The policy reversal creates an interesting market dynamics question. While China's vertical integration of battery supply chains gave them cost advantages regardless of subsidies, the US relied heavily on tax incentives to offset higher production costs. The real competitive gap isn't just policy—it's industrial infrastructure. Do you think state-level incentives can meaningfully fill this void, or is the manufacturing advantage already too entrenched elsewhere?

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