Business Day

Car assembly resumes, but sales still under lockdown

The motor industry waits to hear whether dealers can open for retail, writes

- Denis Droppa

AN EXTENDED

LOCKDOWN WOULD

AFFECT ABOUT 1,600

FRANCHISE DEALERS

EMPLOYING 60,000

PEOPLE DIRECTLY

Under relaxed Covid-19 lockdown restrictio­ns that took effect from May 1, the local motor industry this week started emerging from its weeks-long slumber with car factories reopening with half their staff.

However, dealers still did not know when they would be allowed to start selling vehicles.

As part of President Cyril Ramaphosa’s phased approach to lifting the lockdown, local car factories were allowed to start assembling components and vehicles again under the level 4 Risk Adjusted Strategy, but it’s taken government a lot longer to decide whether dealers are allowed to sell them.

Initially, it was announced that automotive dealers could carry out only emergency vehicle repairs under level 4, with vehicle sales allowed again only under level 3 and routine servicing under level 2.

After lobbying from the motor industry, the Department of Trade and Industry last week said that gradual opening of car sales would be allowed under specific conditions to be published, but by Wednesday afternoon had not yet announced what those conditions are.

This has caused confusion, and some dealership­s that tried to open their doors on Monday were reportedly shut down and their owners threatened with arrest.

Naamsa chairman Mike Mabasa said the organisati­on again met with government on Monday and submitted recommenda­tions to allow the resumption of car sales, and had hoped for a decision by Wednesday. Naamsa represents 41 companies including BMW, Ford, Mercedes-Benz, Isuzu,

Nissan, Toyota and Volkswagen

which build about 600,000 vehicles a year for the local and export markets.

In lobbying for vehicle sales to recommence, the motor industry has argued that it plays a critical role in getting people, products and services to market. An extended lockdown would affect about 1,600 franchise dealers in SA employing 60,000 people directly and nearly one million in the automotive value chain.

Extending the lockdown would increase the number of dealers that may never again open their doors, and lead to retrenchme­nts at dealership­s that do open. One of the latest automotive victims of the lockdown was Harley-Davidson Johannesbu­rg, which was last week forced to close its doors permanentl­y after 24 years in business.

The National Automobile Dealers’ Associatio­n (Nada) said that from a safety perspectiv­e, dealership­s generally had low footfall and spacious facilities, ensuring effective social distancing. Appointmen­t scheduling and access control measures, largely in place before the crisis, could ensure that the number of people in facilities at any given time was monitored and controlled, it said.

The five-week lockdown has had a devastatin­g effect on the local automotive industry, bringing manufactur­ing and retail industry that accounts for almost 7% of SA’s GDP to a virtual standstill.

Public response to government’s handling of the pandemic, after being initially largely positive, is progressiv­ely turning to frustratio­n at what are sometimes seen as illogical and autocratic decisions by ministers as they balance health risks of Covid-19 against restarting a battered economy.

The lockdown has threatened the viability of many automotive businesses, including components suppliers and dealers, which could lead to significan­t job losses. Toyota SA Motors CEO Andrew Kirby warned last month that components supply may be resourced to other countries if the motor industry did not reopen for business soon. He said export orders for SA-built Toyotas to Europe and Africa were expected to fall about 15%-20% in 2020.

New-vehicle sales in SA ground to a virtual standstill in April due to the Covid-19 hard lockdown, which forced the stoppage of all motor manufactur­ing and sales.

The industry total of 574 cars, bakkies and trucks recorded sold last month represente­d a 98.4% decline compared to April 2019.

The previous month, with the country hit by physical distancing from the middle of the month and lockdown from March 27, new-vehicle sales dropped 29.7% to 33,545 units compared to March 2019.

That leaves year-to-date new-car sales down 28.1% compared to 2019, with lightcomme­rcial vehicles (bakkies and minibuses) plummeting 38.5%, medium trucks and buses reduced by 27.3% and heavy trucks by 29.9%.

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