1 / 12

The South African Auto Component Industry

Presentation by Roger Pitot NAACAM. The South African Auto Component Industry. European vehicle manufacturers BMW, DaimlerChrysler and Volkswagen are all 100% subsidiaries

mckile
Télécharger la présentation

The South African Auto Component Industry

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Presentation by Roger Pitot NAACAM The South African Auto Component Industry

  2. European vehicle manufacturers BMW, DaimlerChrysler and Volkswagen are all 100% subsidiaries • Japanese and other Multinational manufacturers, Ford, Nissan, General Motors and Toyota are now also 100% or majority controlled subsidiaries • All other major marques are imported – European (Fiat, Peugeot/Citroen, Renault), Japanese (Daihatsu, Honda, Subaru), Korean (GM/Daewoo, Hyundai, Kia), Indian (Tata, Mahindra), and several Chinese brands in 2007. Structure of the Industry in SA - OEMs

  3. Introduced 1995, extended to 2012, subject to review during 2006/7 • Duties progressively reducing to 25% CBU and 20% components by 2012, from 115% and 50% in 1994 • Duty-Free import of components of 27% of ex-factory price of vehicles produced locally • Import credits earned for exports, with benefits reducing - tradeable • Productive Asset Allowance (PAA) for Investments – duty credit of 20% over 5 years • Minor programme for heavy trucks and buses The Motor Industry Development Programme (MIDP): Key Features

  4. Detailed review during 2006/7 focusing on investment and production support • Ministerial assurances confirm government support through to 2020 • Review will take account of South Africa’s WTO obligations by replacing direct export subsidy • Future policy will support enhanced investment and production in the South African auto industry, particularly local components Future Direction of the MIDP

  5. Significant improvement in quality and productivity. Progressive economies of scale with local platforms down from 42 to 23 • Affordability – New vehicle prices below inflation for 8 out of 11 years • Large growth in industry exports and, in recent years, significant growth in domestic market • Stable overall industry employment with modest growth in specific sectors • Trade deficit has worsened in past two years due to stronger currency, higher vehicle imports MIDP : Industry Performance Since 1995

  6. Car Sales History – 1970 to 2006

  7. Component Exports (R mil) Component 1995 2000 2006 Catalytic Converters 388 4682 15810 Seats, Stitched Leather 1019 1926 2549 Engines and Parts 112 485 2200 Tyres 219 682 1220 Silencers & Exhausts 76 377 880 Road Wheels 157 551 681 Car Radios/Players 7 89 377 Axles 3 63 332 Total Components 3318 12640 30503

  8. Component Export Destinations – 2006 Main destinations for SA component exports are the major first-world markets Germany 29% Spain 11% UK 9% France 7% Italy 2.2% Total EU 72% USA 10%

  9. Component Manufacturers – Key 2006 Data • The employment of the component manufacturers totals 79,000, growing at 1.5% annually • Sales exceeded R56 billion (€7 bn), with 47% OE, 30% export, 23% aftermarket • Capex was R2,2 billion • Average local content of components exported was 80% • Real Vehicle local content only 40% • 8 of the top 10 global manufacturers are invested in South Africa.

  10. South Africa as a Sustainable, Low-Cost Manufacturing Base World-class, low-cost infrastructure – railways, roads, harbours, telecommunications and electricity Well-developed, efficient capital market and world class banking and financial services sector Low manpower costs by first-world standards and abundant supply of trainable labour Low cost of factory establishment (competitive & efficient construction industry, low real estate cost) Abundant raw material availability and competitive tooling costs Competitive and efficient ocean freight and comprehensive airline network

  11. Opportunities in South Africa What? Technology transfer Joint Venture production 2nd-tier supply Direct Investment Why? Advantage of a sustainable, low-cost manufacturing base Prospects for above-average economic growth in medium to long term Socio-political stability Sound macro-economic policies and targeted industry support Acknowledged good quality of life supported by first-world financial and IT infrastructureg

  12. Thank You ! NAACAM is ready to assist you to participate in the South African Automotive Industry roger@naacam.co.za www.naacam.co.za

More Related