Local automobile manufacturers ask for more support

Nov 30th at 14:18
30-11-2019 14:18:56+07:00

Local automobile manufacturers ask for more support

Viet Nam's automobile industry is small compared to regional markets and local suppliers are asking for more support from the Government.

 

A report from the MoIT says though the rate of domestically manufactured and assembled vehicles have grown, only a few suppliers are involved in the local supply chain. Compared to Thailand, the number of Vietnamese suppliers in the automotive industry is low.

The report says Thailand has nearly 700 Tier 1 suppliers, which supply parts or systems directly to original equipment manufacturers, while Viet Nam has less than 100. Thailand has about 1,700 Tier 2&3 suppliers, which provide raw, or close-to-raw, materials like metals and plastics for the Tier 1 category, while Viet Nam has less than 150. Locally manufactured 9-seater cars in Viet Nam only meet 7-10 per cent of the demand.

Pham Tuan Anh, deputy director of the department of industry, told Vietnam News Agency at a seminar on Thursday that market capacity was small because the local automobile industry did not have the conditions to grow.

Anh specified: “Viet Nam does not offer enough support for the automobile industry.”

Anh also said policies that supported the automotive industry still conflicted and were unstable.

Do Thu Hoang, deputy general director of Toyota Viet Nam, also told Vietnam News Agency that following ASEAN integration in 2018, the import tax on complete cars was cut to zero per cent within the bloc, and that had created more difficulties for the industry.

Hoang said the biggest challenge was the small size and output of the market. For example, the number of Toyota’s Vios model cars produced in Viet Nam was only one-eighth of Thailand's, which made production costs higher than other countries in the region.

Due to limited production, most manufacturers had to import parts, which resulted in very high costs for packaging, shipping and import duties.

Hoang continued: “Currently, the cost of manufacturing in Viet Nam is 10-20 per cent higher than in Thailand and Indonesia.”

“Before 2018, when there were high taxes for imported cars, locally produced cars were still able to compete. Now the rate has been cut to zero per cent, it is very difficult for car manufacturers in Viet Nam,” she said.

Compared with Thailand and Indonesia, Viet Nam's automobile output is far behind. Thailand produces about 2 million cars and Indonesia 1.3 million cars each year, while Viet Nam can only produce about 300,000.

A representative of the Vietnam Automobile Manufacturers Association (VAMA) told the seminar that local car manufacturers planned to make 500,000 cars next year.

More supporting policies

To cope with these difficulties, local manufacturers at the seminar asked for more support policies from the State.

Pham Van Tai, general director of Thaco Truong Hai, said: “Viet Nam needs certain technical barriers to help local car makers. For example, in order to enjoy the zero per cent import tax rate, imported cars must have a localisation rate of 40 per cent."

He also said the Government should lower the special consumption tax on the value of domestic production in order to reduce the price of locally manufactured cars.

Another representative from the MoIT’s industry department suggested the Government could offer incentives for consumers who purchase locally-made products to increase demand. The same thing had been done in Thailand and Malaysia, he said.

At the seminar, some manufacturers asked the Ministry of Finance to remove the special consumption tax for locally made parts to help them reduce prices to compete with foreign manufacturers.

vir



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