Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Auto firms demand policy shift to make vehicles affordable

- Malyaban Ghosh malyaban.g@livemint.com

India’s automobile industry on Wednesday asked the government to frame policies that would make vehicle purchases more affordable for customers in a bid to revive sales, impacted by factors such as high prices and the Covid pandemic.

Speaking at the annual convention of Society of Indian Automobile Manufactur­ers (Siam), senior executives at top automakers said that such a move would help the industry stage a recovery in sales, especially of passenger cars and twowheeler­s.

Automobile sales in India have been on the downtrend since the second half of FY19 when the bankruptcy of Infrastruc­ture Leasing and Financial Services caused a liquidity crisis among non-banking financial companies (NBFCs), which are some of the major lenders to the auto industry.

Higher fuel prices, weak consumer sentiment in a slowing economy and a rise in vehicle prices to meet new regulation­s on safety and emissions led to a decline in car sales in FY20.

The outbreak of the pandemic from March 2020 led to another double-digit decline in sales in FY21 as sales and manufactur­ing operations came to a halt till May due to a strict nationwide lockdown. The second covid wave derailed a possible recovery in the June quarter.

R.C. Bhargava, chairman of Maruti Suzuki, said automobile sales have been declining before the outbreak of the pandemic and not many policy measures have been announced to arrest the decline. New regulation­s such as Bharat Stage VI emission norms and higher taxes imposed by states have made entry-level cars unaffordab­le for buyers.

“We have to take into account the economic status of people of India. I don’t think the industry will revive, be it internal combustion engine or electric, unless we tackle the question of affordabil­ity of customers,” he said.

He said new regulation­s like BS-VI have added ₹22,000 to the cost of an entry-level car like Alto. This coupled with taxes imposed by states have made the increase substantia­l for a pricesensi­tive customer.

India’s two-wheeler makers have also been urging the Union government to reduce goods and services tax imposed on entry level two-wheelers to 18% from the existing 28%. Sales of entrylevel two-wheelers have remained subdued over the past two fiscals due to an economic slowdown and increase in ownership costs.

 ?? MINT ?? The outbreak of the pandemic from March 2020 led to a double-digit decline in sales in FY21.
MINT The outbreak of the pandemic from March 2020 led to a double-digit decline in sales in FY21.

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