Auto industry blasts ‘pointless’ reform
The Australian
September 05, 2014
COALITION plans to allow personal imports of new cars have been savaged by the automotive sector, amid warnings that the move will cause job losses without providing consumer benefits.
As reported by The Australian yesterday, Assistant Infrastructure Minister Jamie Briggs has released a policy discussion paper on changes to the Motor Vehicle Standards Act. He said the federal government would look at easing restrictions on individual imports.
This would allow consumers to potentially save thousands of dollars on vehicles bought from overseas dealerships, particularly in the luxury segment.
In Britain, a high-end Land Rover Discovery has a listing price of about £54,500 ($96,350), compared with $88,000 in Australia, but once the luxury car tax and other charges are included, the on-road cost jumps to about $105,000.
Industry groups in the automotive sector reacted angrily to the mooted changes yesterday, saying the government had created uncertainty in the sector that may further dampen demand.
Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries chief executive Tony Weber said the changes would only benefit the “top end of town”, and called for the government to instead focus on removing the 33 per cent luxury car tax and import tariffs.
“There is this notion in this country that people pay much more for cars, but the vast majority of cars are very competitively priced, and certainly at the low end there is absolutely no evidence of any differential,” he said.
The head of corporate affairs for Mercedes-Benz in the Asia-Pacific, David McCarthy, agreed, saying the “mass-market consumer” would not benefit from the measure.
“There is a real and present risk that investment, skills training and employment levels will be adversely impacted not just by the uncertainty that now exists but by the possibility of decisions made to change the nature of a market that is operating effectively, efficiently and for the benefit of the Australian consumer,” he said. “One has to ask: why disrupt investment, employment, skills training and business confidence to try and make the most expensive cars cheaper?”
Australian Motor Industry Federation chief Richard Dudley said industry had “multiple concerns” about some of the ideas included in the discussion paper.