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Friday April 26, 2024

Pakistan auto industry in worst crisis

By Our Correspondent
July 14, 2019

ISLAMABAD: The automobile industry is going through worst crisis amid rising prices due to imposition of new, higher taxes in the budget and steep currency devaluation in the recent weeks and now the government is expected to receive less tax by Rs150 to Rs200 billion from the industry due to the emerging situation.

Auto industry was the highest tax-paying industry during the last government’s tenure followed by cigarette, tobacco, telecom sectors. Sources said that Suzuki company has showed deficit and Honda and Toyota may also show deficit if the situation did not improve. Sale of vehicles has dropped by 50 to 60 till June 2019 as compared to sales till June 2018. As a result, Honda and Toyota has laid off hundreds of employees.

Honda Atlas Cars Pakistan (HACP) has shut down its plant for 10 days as its inventories piled up to 2,000 units on plummeting car sales amid the crisis situation.

Similarly, Indus Motor Company (IMC), which produces Toyota models in Pakistan, has also decided to stop car production for eight days, two days every week, during this month. Honda had kept its plant closed for two days earlier last week. However, a Pakistan Suzuki Motor Company spokesman said the company will take decision whether or not to cut down production in the next few days after analysing sales trend and flow of booking orders during the present month.

HACP and IMC executives say their decision to scale down production during July was informed by extremely lacklustre sales in the first 10 days of the current month. They said their inventories from the last month and the first 10 days of July have grown rapidly because of steep increase in car prices after currency devaluation as well as imposition of Advance Customs Duty (ACD) on all imports and Federal Excise Duty (FED) on assembled cars, leaving us them no option but to shut down the plant to cut production. If the present trend holds, they expect sales to drop to less than 30,000 units this business year (April 2019-March 2020) from over 48,000 units last year.

An IMC official also gave the same reasons for observing eight no-production days during July. “It is a very serious situation for the local car manufacturers who are piling up inventories,” he said. But he did not give the size of inventory his company has built so far, saying the production cuts could increase next month if sales do not pick up.

The sales have been on the decrease for the last three months as total car and light commercial vehicles (LCV) volume contracted by 5 percent to 17,561 units in June from a year ago. Overall, the car and LCV sales plunged by 7 percent during the last fiscal year to 240,335 units from the previous year. The impact of implementation of 5 percent ACD on all raw materials and parts used by the local assemblers and imposition of 2.5-7.5 percent FED from July 1 has started resulting in further decline in sales. Industry expects a significantly large dip in sales at the end of the year. It may be recalled that the industry was expecting to increase its sales to half a million units by 2022.