Hindustan Times (Jammu)

Luxury car makers seek tax cuts on vehicles in budget

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Luxury car makers Mercedes-Benz, Audi and Lamborghin­i expect the government to lower taxes on automobile­s in the upcoming Budget, saying the premium segment of the auto industry has not been able to grow due to high taxation besides being hit hard by coronaviru­s.

Any hike in taxes on luxury cars will hit demand and prevent recovery from the disruption­s witnessed last year, according to senior officials of the companies.

“Anything which is a deterrent to the demand in the sector we should stay away because at the end that will cause problem,” Mercedes- Benz India managing director and chief executive officer Martin Schwenk told PTI.

He was responding to a query on the company’s expectatio­ns on the tax front from the government in the upcoming budget.

Seeking a reduction on taxes on the auto sector, Schwenk said, “Already the auto industry is highly taxed...from the import duties to GST and cess which is 22 per cent (on luxury cars). I think the target should actually be to support the growth of the sector and reduce tax. We should try find an avenue.”

Expressing similar sentiments, Audi India head Balbir Singh Dhillon said the challenges for the luxury car segment, which is recovering from the Covid-19 induced disruption­s, in 2021 are “more or less the constants from the past”.

“One is of course the high taxation on luxury cars, including cess. That remains a challenge because what it has done is that it has not let luxury cars grow beyond 1% (of the total automobile markets in India). It is just hovering around 1% and in last year 2020 it could have dropped probably 0.7-0.8%. That (high tax) remains the biggest challenge,” he added.

Lamborghin­i India head Sharad Agarwal said the expectatio­n of the super luxury segment players from the government is to maintain a consistenc­y because the segment has suffered a lot in 2020.

“We want the segment to at least bounce back to 2019 level in 2021. We are still not expecting growth to come back but we want to touch 2019 level in the segment. If there is any change (increase) in the tax structure in the segment it is going to hit the segment very negatively,” he added. Agarwal further said taxation is a big factor affecting the sector’s growth and the current sales numbers don’t reflect the potential of the country, and any tax rise will impact growth.

 ??  ?? Car makers cite lack of growth in premium segment due to high taxes and effects of Covid-19.
Car makers cite lack of growth in premium segment due to high taxes and effects of Covid-19.

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