The Borneo Post

Rags-to-riches Skoda mulls post-Brexit sales woes

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MLADÁ BOLESLAV, CZECH REPUBLIC: Once the butt of jokes, Czech-made Skoda cars have won over Brits, but the UK’s looming exit from the European Union could deal a heavy blow to the brand and the entire Czech economy.

Britain is the fifth largest export market for the Czech Republic, an EU member of 10.6 million people heavily dependent on overseas shipments, especially cars.

British lawmakers voted to postpone Brexit from March 29 to at least June, but a no- deal hard Brexit that would slap high tariffs on imports like cars is still possible.

Controlled by Volkswagen since 1991, Skoda exports some 80,000 cars to Britain a year, almost 10 per cent of its annual output.

In an e-mailed statement, Skoda told AFP it was “worried and getting ready for all scenarios” and called for a “solution acceptable for all parties”, but declined to elaborate.

Radek Spicar, vice-president of the Czech Confederat­ion of Industry, went further, warning that the company might suffer a heavy blow.

“A hard Brexit would mean 10per cent import duties slapped on cars, and that would hurt,” he told AFP.

“It would stifle demand for cars. Companies like Skoda wouldn’t collapse, but they would lose part of an important market,” Spicar added.

“Besides, Britain is a symbolic market for Skoda – it has come a long way from being the butt of jokes to one of the most respected makes.”

“How do you double the value of a Skoda? Fill the tank with petrol,” went a popular joke about Skoda’s clunky models produced in the 1980s when Czechoslov­akia – the predecesso­r of the Czech Republic and Slovakia – was still communist.

“Do you know why Skoda has heated rear windows? So when you’re pushing it home in the winter, your hands stay warm,” said another.

But Britons gradually melted – Skoda’s Fabia model was named the car of the year by What Car? magazine in 2000, while the Skoda Yeti became the best car to own in a 2013 poll of 46,000 British drivers conducted by the Auto Express magazine.

“Nobody is ashamed of driving a Skoda now, Jeremy Clarkson praised it in Top Gear, it is driven by taxi drivers,” said Spicar.

“Britain is simply a symbolic, important market, and Brexit would be terribly unpleasant for the make.”

A hard Brexit would “slash Czech exports to the UK by 20 per cent, Czech GDP growth by 1.1 points, and employment by 40,000 staff”, analysts at the Ceska sporitelna bank, a Czech unit of Austria’s Erste Bank, have warned.

Czech companies sell goods worth 210 billion koruna ( 8.2 billion euros, US$ 9.2 billion) to Britain a year, with auto exports making up more than half of the total, according to Ceska.

Accounting for more than 20 per cent of Czech industrial output, the car industry “is the most threatened by Brexit because of its size within the economy”, David Marek, chief economist at Deloitte Czech Republic, told AFP.

Three global carmakers with Czech plants turned out more than 1.4 million cars in 2018, a new record, with Skoda making up over 60 per cent of that.

South Korea’s Hyundai, and TPCA, a joint-venture of Japan’s Toyota and France’s PeugeotCit­roen, also have Czech factories.

A thriving auto sector has been a major contributo­r to economic growth lasting since 2013, with 3.0 per cent expansion last year following 4.5 per cent in 2017.

Czech producers of electronic­s, nuclear plant components, sweets, photo equipment and others are also worried.

“We generate turnover of some 10 million euros in Britain, which is about four per cent of our total turnover,” says Tomas Kolar, chief executive of Linet, a producer of hospital beds and mattresses.

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