Thursday, January 5, 2012

Drive in Growth

Ratan Tata poses with the iconic Jaguar

Mercedes Benz Class

BMW brings the Mini Cooper  to India
Indians bought roughly 2.5 million cars in calendar year 2011, worth some Rs 150,000 crore or $ 30 billion. Another half a million were exported during the year.
In 2012, if car loan rates were to go down, this market could grow by 10-12 per cent. If rates remain static and annual economic growth drops below 7.5 per cent, analysts say the car market would still grow by 5-7 per cent.
Of course that's not much compared to the 30 per cent growth in sales which automakers clocked in 2010, when interest rates were still low and the economy was booming. Or for that matter the double digit annual car sales growth through the 2000s.
No wonder every auto-maker is scrambling to be at the Delhi Auto Expo now on at the sprawling Pragati Maidan (Progress Gardens) show-launching some 60 new glitzy models.
Japanese shipping line NYK, which among other things specialises in bulk transportation of cars, estimates India will  make about 5 million cars by 2015. It bases its projections on plant capacity being set up by various automobile giants.
Almost all cars and sold in India are `made in India’. Typically, as General Motors’ India chief Lowell Paddock, says most cars have between 70-98 per cent Indian components. The more `Indian’ the car is, the cheaper it is. Partly because it’s cheap to manufacture in India, partly because the tax structure is skewed in favour of domestic manufacture.
That’s a result of shrewd planning on the part of Indian policymakers who in the 1990s sought to lure global automakers to India with the bait of its huge market, but cleverly brought in a tax structure which discouraged imports of built up and knocked down car kits. What one industry secretary in those days had told me was “we don’t want to see screwdriver assemblies in India. We want full scale car manufacturing plants.” India has had full scale car plants since the 1950s. But without technological innovations, they kept churning out ‘50s and ‘60s era cars till Maruti, a joint venture with Japan’s Suzuki Motors brought out the M800, a simple 4-seater mini, in 1984.
The auto policy crafted in the 1990s, brought in global auto majors starting with the now defunct Daewoo to General Motors, Honda, Mercedes Benz and Audi and forced the global biggies to make huge investments through the 1990s and 2000s to set up factories, develop Indian vendors who could make quality spare parts. Most of them have still kept the most important or key elements of their cars, a `secret’ from their Indian engineers. For instance, Maruti-Suzuki, India’s largest carmaker, just wouldn’t trust Indians with gear box technology and had a running battle with the industry ministry on this issue through the 1990s.
Tatas and Mahindras have however broken that tech barrier by simply buying their way in. Tatas, who used to make horrible cars like the Indica, with gears which felt like they had been lifted out of trucks, have bought Jaguar-Land Rover (JLR) and now have access to some of the best car designs and engineering secrets in the world. Ratan Tata today told reporters he would be manufacturing the iconic JLR cars in the country. Besides, pepping up the civilian car market, versions of the Land Rover, an all terrain vehicle, could well try to be a replacement for Jonga, a 1960s design jeep-type vehicle, which the Indian Army still drives around in.   
Mahindras have bought Korean car-maker Ssangyong. Its cars are not considered great in terms of design but are grudgingly accepted as value for money, robust vehicles. BBC’s Top Gear says “This is not some Korean epiphany, it’s a bunch of very badly designed cars indeed. They’re cheap, but if you buy one, so are you,”   but also adds “This much SUV at these prices? Too good to be true? Well, yes, in the sense that it all feels cheap and a bit nasty, but you can’t escape the allure of a poor man’s M-Class.” Mahindras are now trying to buy up Saab, a Swedish-Dutch automaker, which at one time was owned by General Motors.
But before Indians can start bringing out the champagne in celebration, they should also note that the Chinese have taken a similar route to building up their own automotive industry and produce a mind boggling 17 cars million a year. The Brazilians who make about 3.5 million cars annually, are already ahead of the Indians, in many respects. My own guess is that by 2025, the battle royale in the autoworld will  be between Indo-European and Japanese-Indian firms on the one hand, Sino-American and Sino-Euoropean firms on the other and US-Latino firms at the third corner of the global car Triad.  

8 comments:

Arun Chakraborty said...

Thanks. A vry informative and analytically presented one. Me benefitted a lot.

Anonymous said...

If that was Jeremy Clarkson of Top Gear commenting on the Ssangyong, the disdain's understandable and dismissable! Poor fellow's hard put to see virtues in a non-British product... and there aren't any these days, anyway!

Very good, Jayanta! Excellent nuggets of info, like the one on Maruti's gearbox technology, which were unknown to me!
.... Kalyan Biswas.

Mahendra said...

A very comprehensive picture of India's passenger car sector.

A long road from the Plymouths and Desotos of the 1940s-50s, the Fiats 1100s and Ambassadors of 1960s-80s. If only Ambassador had kept pace in innovation and not tried to influence the GOI's norms, it would have done better in competition. If only Premier had not shut down and given preference to old Fiat owners for its contemporary Italian cars. But these are 'ifs' and 'buts' of our times.

Was unaware of the extent to which the cars are "Made in india". Remember, it took Maruti years to touch 12 percent indigenisation?

Agree with Anonymous. The BBC guy's disdainful comments. They still think they have an Empire to manage and Asians and Africans to 'civilise.' Why, look at what the Americans had to say about Nano, costing "as little as two breast transplants."

It has been a long road, indeed. But India needs longer and better roads if five million cars are to be made, run and exported.

Otherwise, like an old song filmed on Johnny Walker and Tuntun in "Taxi Driver" (1953)... "phir bhi hawa nikal gayi!"

Cheers

Bharati said...

A comprehensive picture of the Auto market and industry. An abrupt ending though.
Great read!

Mukund said...

Excellent piece of writing on indian auto sector. Its indeed very informative. One also gets a holistic view of the auto sector in India by reading this article. In particular I learnt about the role played by our great policymakers who designed the tax structure in such a way that resulted in the mushrooming of auto component manufacrurers in India. ......Mukund Trivedy

sanju said...

the car market is expanding and is growing. The indinization will be key to most car makers in the future and also many Indian car companies will find foreign market like the West Asia and Africa very fertile. I personally hope India will start exporting cars to the European sector.

Anonymous said...

Аренда машины – услуга, которая сегодня востребована в странах Европы, в России только набирает обороты. Впрочем, все клиенты нашей компании смогли по достоинству оценить преимущества такой услуги, как прокат автомобиля. Авто в аренду может понадобиться пригодиться в форс-мажорной ситуации – как замена личному автомашине, как средство для передвижения на исключительных мероприятиях, или как альтернатива метро или дребезжащему трамваю гостей города.
Наша компания готова предложить напрокаттранспортные средства частным лицам, организациям и иностранным гражданам. Авто »Анди Моторс» находятся в идеальном техническом и эстетическом состоянии. Все они полностью укомплектованы всем тем, что может потребоваться в дороге, так что клиент, который воспользовался услугами нашей компании и арендовал наше авто может быть полностью уверен в том, что дорога станет удобной и быстрой. В случае поломки мы бесплатно заменим авто на исправное автомобильное средство, причем сделаем это максимально быстро. Наша компания - это европейское качество услуг, профессионализм и ответственный подход к решению любых
вопросов.

[url=http://www.andimotors.ru/conditions/]цена аренды автомобиля[/url]
[url=http://www.andimotors.ru/vacancies/]автомобиль легковой аренда[/url]

Anonymous said...

[url=http://MirSkidok.ru/kuba/]туры куба[/url]
[url=http://MirSkidok.ru/egipet/]дешевые туры в египет[/url]


Компания MirSkidok.ru осуществляет деятельность на рынке услуг уже более десяти лет, проложив совсем новый подход к решению такого немаловажного вопроса, как организация отдыха. В сети работает команда специалистов высокого класса, имеющие многолетний опыт в туристической сфере.
Основные принципы работы компании состоят в индивидуальном подходе, участливом отношении к каждому клиенту, предлагая качественные услуги по самым доступным ценам. Во всех офисах MirSkidok.ru общая база предложений, которая всё время обновляется, потому цены во всей сети одинаковые. Чтобы стать покупателем лучшего тура по наиболее выгодной цене, достаточно узнать, где располагается ближайший офис MirSkidok.ru.
В концепцию развития компании входит определённое число поставщиков туристических сервисов, чтобы качество и уровень обслуживания оставался неизменно на высоком уровне. Компания является профессиональной сетью агентств, которые специализируется не лишь на одних «горящих» турах, путевках со скидками и бонусами на ближайшие выходные или праздничные дни, но также и на поездках с ранним бронированием.
Число клиентов Мира скидок неумолимо увеличивается с каждым днем. В планах компании - активно расширять сеть по всей России, внедрять новые проекты для более комфортабельного времяпрепровождения клиентов.

[url=http://MirSkidok.ru/italiya/]италия туры[/url]
[url=http://MirSkidok.ru/kurorty-turcii/belek/] белек турция[/url]