Business Standard

Firm urges vendors to reduce imported parts as ~ slides

Plans to build locally to keep costs low

- SURAJEET DAS GUPTA

Maruti Suzuki has asked its key vendors to push their foreign suppliers to set up manufactur­ing facilities in India so that it can drive localizati­on and reduce the overall import content in its cars by around 8 per cent in the coming years.

The combined import content for the car maker and its vendors (who also import sub-components) averages between 15-16 per cent. With the rupee depreciati­ng against the dollar, the cost of imported parts will rise, affecting the production cost.

While it’s true that the average localizati­on of Maruti Suzuki cars is as high as 96-97 per cent, vendors who supply the components also have a certain imported content. As a result, the combined import content of the company, together with the vendors, stands at around 15-16 per cent.

Of this figure, imported electronic­s account for about 8 per cent. However, it is not viable for these suppliers to set up shop based on volumes from just one manufactur­er. Sustaining these electronic component manufactur­ers, who have made large investment­s, requires huge volumes which can only come from other vehicle players joining in, and across other industries.

“The country already manufactur­es over four million cars and the volume should go up to 5-6 million per annum in a few years. So foreign component manufactur­ers are assured of enough volumes to set up manufactur­ing in India. We have had a meeting with our key vendors and have asked them to push their component suppliers to come to India,” said R C Bhargava, chairman, Maruti Suzuki.

Bhargava adds that about 7-8 per cent of the components which it and its vendors import can be made in India and that this will make a difference, given the rupee depreciati­on. However, he said that localising electronic­s will need a push from the government as part of its Make in India mission.

Unlike many of its competitor­s, Maruti Suzuki created a massive localisati­on plan some years ago. It has been reaping the benefits, namely keeping costs down. It is this project which helped the company to build volumes as well as manufactur­e cheaper cars while its rivals continued to have a larger import content that made their cars more expensive. With the rupee’s recent depreciati­on, the contrast has become even starker.

Chairman R C Bhargava says localising electronic­s will need a push from the government as part of its Make in India mission

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