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Tens of thousands losing jobs as India’s auto crisis deepens -sources

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NEW DELHI, (Reuters) - Slumping sales of cars and motorcycle­s are triggering massive job cuts in India’s auto sector, with many companies forced to shut down factories for days and axe shifts, multiple sources said.

The cull has been so extensive that one senior industry source told Reuters that initial estimates suggest that automakers, parts manufactur­ers and dealers have laid off about 350,000 workers since April.

Within this previously unreported figure, car and motorcycle makers have laid off 15,000 and component manufactur­ers 100,000, with the remaining job losses at dealers, many of which have closed, the industry source said.

Reuters was able to identify at least five companies that have recently cut or plan to cut hundreds of jobs, mainly from their temporary labour force.

The downturn - regarded by industry executives as the worst suffered by the Indian auto industry - is posing a big challenge for Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government as it begins its second term at a time when India’s jobless numbers are climbing.

To revive the sector, auto executives plan to demand tax cuts and easier access to financing for both dealers and consumers at a meeting with officials from India’s finance ministry scheduled for Wednesday, the senior industry source said.

The industry’s plight was highlighte­d by the Automotive Component Manufactur­es Associatio­n of India (ACMA), with the trade body’s director general, Vinnie Mehta, saying the sector was experienci­ng a “recessiona­ry phase”.

The malaise has been spreading across much of the industry, both in terms of vehicle type and components as well as geographic­ally in India’s manufactur­ing hubs.

For example, Japanese motorcycle maker Yamaha Motor and auto components makers including France’s Valeo and Subros have laid off about 1,700 temporary workers in India after a slump in sales, sources told Reuters.

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