The American car industry can’t go on like this, by Patrick George
Today’s must-read: Ford is taking drastic steps to compete with China’s cheap EVs. Even that might not be enough.

One Story to Read Today highlights a single newly published—or newly relevant—Atlantic story that’s worth your time.

To compete with China’s cheap electric cars, Ford is retooling the assembly line—the very thing Henry Ford used to get the world motoring a century ago, Patrick George writes. Even that might not be enough.

(Illustration by Matteo Giuseppe Pani / The Atlantic. Sources: Henning Kaiser / Picture Alliance / Getty; Getty.)

Last year, Ford CEO Jim Farley commuted in a car that wasn’t made by his own company. In an effort to scope out the competition, Farley spent six months driving around in a Xiaomi SU7. The Chinese-made electric sedan is one of the world’s most impressive cars: It can accelerate faster than many Porsches, has a giant touch screen that lets you turn off the lights at your house, and comes with a built-in AI assistant—all for roughly $30,000 in China. “It’s fantastic,” Farley said about the Xiaomi SU7 on a podcast last fall. “I don’t want to give it up.”

Farley has openly feared what might happen to Ford if more Americans can get behind the wheel of the Xiaomi SU7. Ford was able to import a Xiaomi from Shanghai for testing purposes, but for now, regular Americans cannot buy the SU7 or another one of the many affordable and highly advanced EVs made in China. Stiff tariffs and restrictions on Chinese technology have kept them out of the United States. If things changed, Ford—along with all other automakers in the U.S.—would be in serious danger.


Previous One Story picks:

Sign up for This Week, our editors’ Sunday-evening selection of stories that are sparking conversation right now.

Did someone forward you this newsletter? Sign up here. For full access to our journalism, subscribe to The Atlantic.

Summer reads, games, and more

Your Atlantic summer is here. Read, listen, play, and find fascinating stories to inspire this season’s adventures. Subscribe today for unlimited access to all of The Atlantic, all summer long.

Subscribe

This email was sent to fugol@niepodam.pl
You've signed up to receive newsletters from The Atlantic.

If you wish to unsubscribe from The Atlantic newsletters, click here.

To update your email preferences, click here.

The Atlantic Monthly Group LLC · 610 Water Street, SW · Washington, DC 20024