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Fiat Chrysler's New US Jobs Could Help It Avoid Big Fees

Auto manufacturing giant Fiat Chrysler is moving some of its production from Mexico to Michigan, which could save it big if the U.S. leaves NAFTA.

Fiat Chrysler's New US Jobs Could Help It Avoid Big Fees
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Auto manufacturer Fiat Chrysler says it's adding 2,500 manufacturing jobs in the U.S., thanks in part to the GOP tax plan passed last month.

The company also said it'll give a $2,000 bonus to 60,000 of its U.S. employees.

President Donald Trump boasted about the move on Twitter on Thursday, saying the company was moving a plant.

Government Accuses Fiat Chrysler Of Using Emissions-Cheating Software
Government Accuses Fiat Chrysler Of Using Emissions-Cheating Software

Government Accuses Fiat Chrysler Of Using Emissions-Cheating Software

The Environmental Protection Agency says Fiat Chrysler didn't disclose software features in a control system.

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That's not quite the case. The company is planning to shift production of its heavy-duty Ram trucks from Saltillo, Mexico, to Michigan by 2020. But the Saltillo plant isn't going anywhere; it's being repurposed to produce other types of vehicles.

Modernizing the Michigan plant will cost the company $1 billion. 

Fortune points out the move could also protect Fiat Chrysler from hefty fees if Trump decides to pull out of the North American Free Trade Agreement, or NAFTA. Another round of NAFTA negotiations are set to happen later this month, and the president has recently signaled that if those talks don't produce a way to have Mexico fund Trump's proposed border wall, the U.S. might leave for good.