Not a US situation , but a US and Canadian situation. There are tons of folks ticked off about the supposed North American Free Trade Act , and we all know that is a joke, but to blame the US or Chrysler is not reasonable. It is virtually the same with other Corporations and it stems from both Governments.
1. US cars must meet 50 State US standards, not standards for any place else, hence whether we all like it or not ( and I don't like it ) it is a legal situation, hence coverage is not valid if it goes to Canada. The warranty is not valid if it goes to Germany ( for instance ) either. As ridiculous as it may seem, out of Country means just that, so whether it is next door in Canada or the example of Germany, no warranty.
2. Canadian government will not do this either if it goes out, as it meets standards for there. Same situation occurs.
If there is protectionism it is both Governments, and frankly that is the case , and like everyone here I think it is ridiculous with two Countries that are such good neighbors. But to blame Chrysler is naive, as you might as well start blaming all the other Automobile Corporations. We have a Ford store and the problem is the same. The reality is it is a Government issue and both involved are guilty.
The reason behind price differences , which will seem even more foolish when the cars are so similar, is the cost of certifying , for Canada. With 50-70 cars that are handbuilt each year, for the Viper, figure the likely irrational cost. Again red tape in Canada, and requirements, mean two virtually identical cars have minor little standards , yet by the time one does all the paperwork, stickers, mandatory changes, costs are incurred that are quite ridiculous for only a few cars. Want a concrete example, look at how one State ( California and CARB ) can delay things with one little standard change.
There are many in the Automotive Industry that would like this changed, but the underlying feeling is it is caused by Dealers on both sides of the borders wanting continuity, and not having a loss of customers from one Country to another due to currency changes. Years ago floods of Canadian cars came to the US as the Canadian dollar was worth much less. Now it often goes the other direction and Canadian Dealers are not excited about US cars coming up there. Whether true or not, it is not a situation where one Government is to blame -- it is 100% joint.
1. US cars must meet 50 State US standards, not standards for any place else, hence whether we all like it or not ( and I don't like it ) it is a legal situation, hence coverage is not valid if it goes to Canada. The warranty is not valid if it goes to Germany ( for instance ) either. As ridiculous as it may seem, out of Country means just that, so whether it is next door in Canada or the example of Germany, no warranty.
2. Canadian government will not do this either if it goes out, as it meets standards for there. Same situation occurs.
If there is protectionism it is both Governments, and frankly that is the case , and like everyone here I think it is ridiculous with two Countries that are such good neighbors. But to blame Chrysler is naive, as you might as well start blaming all the other Automobile Corporations. We have a Ford store and the problem is the same. The reality is it is a Government issue and both involved are guilty.
The reason behind price differences , which will seem even more foolish when the cars are so similar, is the cost of certifying , for Canada. With 50-70 cars that are handbuilt each year, for the Viper, figure the likely irrational cost. Again red tape in Canada, and requirements, mean two virtually identical cars have minor little standards , yet by the time one does all the paperwork, stickers, mandatory changes, costs are incurred that are quite ridiculous for only a few cars. Want a concrete example, look at how one State ( California and CARB ) can delay things with one little standard change.
There are many in the Automotive Industry that would like this changed, but the underlying feeling is it is caused by Dealers on both sides of the borders wanting continuity, and not having a loss of customers from one Country to another due to currency changes. Years ago floods of Canadian cars came to the US as the Canadian dollar was worth much less. Now it often goes the other direction and Canadian Dealers are not excited about US cars coming up there. Whether true or not, it is not a situation where one Government is to blame -- it is 100% joint.