Preferential tax rate cannot control car prices

Jul 4th at 10:07
04-07-2018 10:07:36+07:00

Preferential tax rate cannot control car prices

Despite the 0 per cent preferential tax rate, the price of CBU cars imported from ASEAN members keeps increasing, showing that tax rates cannot replace market mechanisms to control automobile prices.

 

Vietnamese people’s hope to buy imported completely build-up (CBU) cars at reasonable prices in 2018 after the ASEAN Trade in Goods Agreement (ATIGA) have been shattered as some cars exported to Vietnam remain at high prices, with the price tag on some even increasing against the past years.

According to Japan-based Toyota’s latest price sheet, the prices of some models increased significantly against last year. For instance, the price of the Fortuner 2.4G 4x2 model has increased by VND45 million ($1,982).

Dantri.com.vn also quoted Toyota Vietnam as saying that the Japanese car maker upgraded some features on their models, which increased prices.

Similarly, Japanese automobile manufacturer Honda’s CR-V models are priced at about VND1 billion ($44,052) per unit. In fact, the price is largely in line with the average of the segment. Since early this year, Honda has raised the price of the CR-V model twice by VND15 million ($660) per unit.

Honda’s representative explained that these changes were necessitated by Decree No.116/2017/ND-CP, which was promulgated by the government and has come into effect since early this year.

Decree 116 has increased expenses on car imports to Vietnam. On February 22, general secretary of the Association of Indonesian Automotive Kukuh Kumara said that the Vietnamese authority’s inspections of exported vehicles could last for one or two months, during which the rest of the batch also need to stay at the ports and exporters have to pay storage charges.

These price increases have proved that prices depend on market economy dynamics, not preferential tax rates.

With luxury goods (cars still belong in this category in Vietnam), external impacts such as tax rate are not enough to alter prices, as market economy dynamics, specifically the relationship between supply and demand, are the key factor in controlling the price.

As supply is scarce due to Decree 116’s limiting car imports and domestic demand keeps increasing, there is a definite upward pressure on prices.

The number of imported cars in the second half of 2018 is forecasted to increase sharply as a huge number of vehicles are stored at domestic ports to be checked before being imported to the domestic market. However, even once this veritable fleet hits the market, price changes are hard to forecast.

vir



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Turkey applies measures on VN yarn

Turkey’s General Directorate for Imports has issued its final decision to impose anti-dumping duties on Partially Oriented Yarn (POY) imported from China, India...

Vietnamese lychees welcomed in Malaysia

The first container of the 2018 Vietnamese lychee crop arrived in Malaysia on Monday and was warmly welcomed by consumers.

Da River Fish Week 2018 kicks off at Big C

“Da River Fish Week 2018” kicked off for the first time on Saturday at Big C Thang Long in Ha Noi.

Vietnam H1 coffee exports seen up 9.6 pct y/y, rice to rise 26.2 pct y/y

But crude oil exports plunged 50.7 percent year-on-year and the product’s revenue in the first six months of 2018 fell to $1.024 billion.

Farmers warned: Don’t go nuts over macadamia

For farmers in the Central Highlands, growing macadamia nuts has not turned out to be the money-spinner they had expected.

Cement exports record strong growth in H1

Viet Nam’s cement consumption continued to register strong growth in the first half of this year, especially cement exports, according to the Ministry of...

Nortalic launches first cooking oil product line with added MCT in Vietnam

The new factory of North Continental Oils & Fats Vietnam Company Limited (Nortalic), a 100 per cent owned subsidiary of Singapore-headquartered Musim Mas Group...

G7 chapter of Trung Nguyen drama continues

The Trung Nguyen drama continues, as the group accuses its own subsidiary of violating intellectual property rights by producing its G7 brand instant coffee...

European Commission to review yellow card against Vietnamese fisheries in early 2019

The European Commission (EC) recorded Viet Nam’s efforts in addressing illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing and would review its ‘yellow card’ warning...

General Department of Customs tightens scrap imports

The General Department of Customs has asked localities to tighten imports of scrap into Viet Nam.

Commodity prices


MOST READ


Back To Top