Foreign carmakers cash
in on Vietnamese middle-class families’ car-buying rush
New cars
on display at the booth of Vietnamese car manufacturer Truong Hai Auto
Corporation (Thaco), which is currently assembling and distributing cars for
three brands, Kia, Mazda and Peugeot, at the Vietnam Motor Show 2015 in Ho
Chi Minh City on November 1, 2015.
Ask about the dream of any Vietnamese middle-class family and you will quickly get a humorous wish list - “one wife, two
children, a three-story (town)house, and a four-wheeled car.” A set of
progressive figures, they are considered to bring luck to Vietnamese people
if they become a reality in the same sequence.
In reality, many households have already had the first three
elements and are rushing to realize the last one, as they are set to pay
significantly more money after a new taxation regime on imported automobiles, or
completely-built units (CBUs), began to take effect on January 1, 2016.
CBUs are automobiles which are thoroughly manufactured, and
then are assembled into complete vehicles, outside Vietnam.
The new consumption tax rate, once levied on all CBUs, is
expected to add 15-30 percent to retail prices, which have already long been
amongst the highest in the world due to the inclusion of multiple existing
taxes and surcharges.
A reader of newswire VnExpress last month found that a VND450
million (US$20,000) Toyota Camry LE assembled in the U.S., once imported into
Vietnam, will be charged a 70-percent import tax, 45-percent special
consumption tax, 10-percent value-added tax, and 10-pecent registration tax,
taking the retail price to almost VND1.8 billion ($79,200), nearly four times
the original price.
Given such high retail prices, the new tax will bring prices
to a new level after the way the base rate for taxation is calculated is
changed.
New taxation mechanism for
2016
The new taxation regime was introduced by the Ministry of Finance in
June, two months after the chief of Toyota Vietnam, chairman of the Vietnam
Automobile Manufacturers' Association, which is mostly composed of
foreign-owned car assemblers, announced that it may cease, and even stop making cars in Vietnam,
once imported cars become cheaper than locally assembled vehicles in 2018
when the regional free trade agreement takes full effect.
According to the Common Effective Preferential Tariff
agreement, the import tax rate currently imposed on 24-seat-and-fewer
passenger cars, 40 percent of whose parts are manufactured by ASEAN
countries, will be cut from the current rate of 50 percent to zero by then.
The ten-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations, or
ASEAN for short, is comprised of Vietnam, Indonesia, Malaysia, the
Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Brunei, Cambodia, Laos, and Myanmar.
The tax for locally assembled vehicles, or completely
knocked-down units (CKDs), is based on the price at which an automobile is
sold to the dealer, including business profit, charges for transportation
from the place of production to the agent, and other expenses including
advertising.
This way of calculating taxes made the price of a CKD at least
five percent costlier than a CBU, Kazuhiro Yamana, general director of
Vinastar automobile joint venture (VSM), told Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper in an interview in
May last year.
Meanwhile, the tax on CBUs was worked out on the basis of the
CIF price, which covers manufacturing, insurance and freight costs.
With the new taxation regime, the base rate for CBUs will be
the same as that for CKDs, which means the difference in base rates for
taxation between the two types has been eliminated.
According to the national statistical body, the General
Statistics Office (GSO), in December alone, about 14,000 CBUs costing $382
million were imported into Vietnam, bringing the year 2015’s figures to
125,000 CBUs with import turnover of about $2.97 billion, up 76.6 percent in
volume and 87.7 percent in value against 2014.
The new figures broke the year 2014’s record, which stood at
around 72,000 CBUs worth $1.6 billion, a 103.8 percent increase in volume and
117.3 percent increase in value compared to 2013, according to a report the
GSO released early 2015.
Respective figures in the volume and value of CBUs in 2013 and
2012 were 35,000 units worth $708 million, and 27,400 units worth $615
million.
Foreign beneficiaries, inside
and outside Vietnam
As of November 30, Thailand dethroned South Korea to become the largest automobile
exporter to Vietnam with 23,516 CBUs, surging 84 percent against the same
period last of 2014, according to the General Department of Vietnam Customs.
Thailand made up 21 percent of total cars imported into
Vietnam in the January-November period, followed by South Korea, China, and
India.
Thailand, currently among the top 10 automobile exporters and
the 12th biggest automotive producer worldwide, early last year set a target
to produce two million automobiles, 1.2 million of which would be
exported.
A finding of Phap
Luat TP.HCM (Ho Chi
Minh City Law) newspaper revealed that in November alone, Thailand exported
3,193 CBUs worth over $60.5 million to Vietnam, the biggest category of which
was pickup trucks.
Thailand is recognized as a powerhouse in pickup trucks with
advanced manufacturing and assembly technologies, on a par with those applied
in Japan and South Korea, Truong Kim Phong, director of sales and marketing
of Ford Vietnam, told Phap
Luat TP.HCM.
In addition, Thai pickup trucks are eligible for tax
incentives when imported into Vietnam, including a five percent import tariff
on a CBU, a representative of Vietnamese importer Truong Hai Auto Corporation
(Thaco) told the Ho Chi Minh City-based newspaper.
Vichai Jirathiyut, president of the Thailand Automotive
Institute, told a press conference in Ho Chi Minh City in April last year
that the Thais were focusing on manufacturing pickup trucks weighing less
than one metric ton and eco-friendly vehicles, as Thailand has the highest
vehicle emissions standards regionally.
Thailand’s automobile production topped 2.8 million units in
2014 with 18 foreign-owned manufacturers including Honda, Isuzu, Mitsubishi,
BMW, GM, and Tata, he said.
The aging 67-million-strong Thai market buys around 880,000
units per year, but as the Thai automotive market is plummeting, the
90-million-plus market of Vietnam with a younger age group will have higher
demand for personal vehicles in the future, Vichai said at the conference.
But it is not just the Thai automobile industry, which many
foreign carmakers are standing behind, that is benefiting from the car-buying
rush of Vietnamese people, but the Vietnamese car industry, which is also led
by foreign-owned firms, is also making a killing.
Official numbers released by the Vietnam Automobile
Manufacturers' Association on December 9 showed that the domestic auto market
continues to accelerate rapidly when VAMA members sold nearly 215,520 units
within 11 months, up 57 percent year on year, and the first time in history
the sales of VAMA have reached a milestone of 200,000 vehicles a year.
With Vietnam’s gross domestic product expanding 6.68 percent
in 2015, the biggest in the last five years, and projected to rise 6.7
percent next year, which will push more Vietnamese families into the
middle-income class, foreign carmakers, based in Vietnam and elsewhere,
including Thailand, may be sighing in relief as the search for another
attractive market bears fruit.
TUOI TRE NEWS
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Chủ Nhật, 10 tháng 1, 2016
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