Showing posts with label auto industry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label auto industry. Show all posts

Thursday, 12 January 2017

3 reasons why tariffs on mexican cars wont solve trumps promise to generate more jobs

"cost comparison between a car manufactured in US vs mexico"
"cost advantage in building cars in mexico instead of united states"

President elect Donald Trump has a tough job on this hands. Generating jobs which remains  his is principle mandate and the  biggest  reason he feels he has been elected for will be an enormous challenge specially in the US auto sector. By threatening to  levy additional tariffs on cars produced in Mexico, Trump is calling for US car makers to continue to manufacture in United States. However as a recent bloomberg story shows it may be more free trade, not tariffs, that would help the U.S. keep some factory jobs from moving south.

Over the past five years, automakers have rushed to build factories in Mexico. The largest car companies have announced at least $22 billion in investments and about 25,000 jobs at new or expanded plants in Mexico by 2019. And that’s just the jobs that have been made public. 

So what do US car makers actually gain to have  manufacturing shipped off to mexico before being shipped to be sold to United States ?. Here  are 3 reasons why "US car makers are more favorably disposed to Mexico and rather build and manufacture cars there compared to US"

1) Cost of Labor :Cheaper labor is only one reason Mexico has seen a surge in new-car production. While the country’s low wages have been the big attraction, one of its key advantages is that it has is trade agreements.

2)Trade Agreements : Mexico has trade agreements with 44 countries, giving automakers access to half the global car market tariff-free.The U.S. has similar trade deals with just 20 countries, which make up 9% of global car sales, according to the Center for Automotive Research in Ann Arbor, Michigan."It’s pretty ironic that what makes Mexico successful is free trade," said Kristen Dziczek, an analyst at CAR "You can look at the new investment that has gone into Mexico and while a huge portion is for the U.S., they are selling a lot elsewhere, too."

3)Cost Arbitrage :To get a better sense of Mexico’s advantage, consider a $25,000 midsize sedan built and shipped in Mexico with one in the U.S. Automakers can pay.Total hourly compensation in the motor vehicle manufacturing sector is about 80 percent less for Mexican workers compared with that for U.S. workers. Considering assembly time for a typical midsize car, an automaker can save $600 per vehicle on labor costs.( see chart above)

While Infrastructure in Mexico lags behind the highway and rail network in the U.S., so it actually costs automakers $300 more per car in additional shipping expenses to produce the vehicle in Mexico and ship it to Europe, and an extra $900 to ship it to the U.S. That means, even after paying significantly less on labor, a car company is walking away with wage savings of only $300 per car,compared to it being manufactured in the US

Most importantly the bulk of the savings are tied to Mexico’s trade agreements and cheaper parts.Consider this! Automakers can save $1,500 per car on cheaper Mexican auto parts. Certainly, a lot of those savings are tied to the lower wages workers in Mexico are paid. But some of these parts are imported to Mexico tariff-free from countries in Europe and Asia, particularly for the foreign automakers who are increasingly investing in Mexico instead of the U.S. Since the U.S. doesn’t have as many free trade agreements, some of the automakers  need would pay extra for some of those parts if they made those models in the U.S which significantly increase the cost of production of cars in United States.  




Wednesday, 28 December 2016

toyota ,volkswagen and ford share the honors for the most sold cars in 2016

"toyota ,volkswagen and ford share the honors for the most sold cars in 2016"

Globally New passenger vehicle registrations increased in China, Europe, the USA, Japan, India and Russia but car sales were down in Brazil. For the first 6 months of the year Toyota seems to be moving to the top spot with over 634,298  cars sold in the first six months according to report compiled by Focus2move which tracked over 2,700 models sold in over 140 countries.

 As of January to November data in Europe 2016, new vehicle registrations in Europe were up by 7% to nearly 14 million cars – only around 300,000 shy of the total for the full year 2015..During the first eleven months of 2016, new passenger vehicle registrations in China increased by 18.6% to 21,058,400 cars – just over a million more than were sold during all of 2015.

Meanwhile in US New light vehicle sales in the USA increased by 3.7% in November 2016 after three consecutive months of contracting. The US market was helped by two extra sales days and strong incentives offered in Black Friday and Thanksgiving campaigns. The trend away from cars in favor of SUVs continued in the US in November 2016. Car sales were down 4% to 509,000 cars while light truck and SUV sales increased by 9% to 863,400 light vehicles.

Volkswagen Golf takes the 2nd position by selling 500,630 sales, a 1.8 percent increase, in 2016 which may or may not be blamed on the cheating emissions scandal that shook the automaker, while the 3rd place goes to Ford F-Series, with 478,394 deliveries, up 12.6%. The Ford also secured the fourth place too, with its Ford Focus compact delivering 367,479 units, down 16.4%, followed closely by the Hyundai Elantra which ranked as the fifth most sold  car in 2016, with 363,490 deliveries. The biggest move the chart has seen this year belongs to the latest Hyundai Tucson, which climbed 949 spots to the 16th place with its 285,060 sales, a massive 202.4 percent increase in popularity, compared to 94,267 units chosen by customers in the first half of 2015. 

Globally only three cars have been widely acknowledged as the "bestselling automobile in the world" since Ford built its millionth Model T on December 10, 1915. The Model T itself remained the highest seller until forty five years after production ceased in 1927. On February 17, 1972 Volkswagen claimed that the Ford had been superseded by the Beetle, when the 15,007,034th was manufactured.Although The Model T has subsequently been credited with 16.5 million units sold, this anomaly is moot in light of the Beetle reaching 21 million.The Beetle remained the bestselling vehicle until the late 1990s, when it was itself overtaken by the Toyota Corolla, which continues to be the number best selling card today even in 2016.