European
car-market is collapsing, recovery may take years
The
European car industry has weakened over the past months, with the
chances of a recovery any time soon looking doubtful. Harsh austerity
measures across the Eurozone have severely impacted the industry,
driving demand down.
RT,
6
March, 2013
The
demand for new cars in the 27-member European Union slumped by 8.2%
last year, hitting its lowest level since 1995, Europe's automotive
industry association reported. German new car sales data showed a
slump of more than 10% in February year-on-year. Tightened consumer
incomes, subdued wages and wide-spread austerity measures across
Europe, have driven the sales to rock bottom. Overcapacity in the
region is also a serious issue in the area. General sentiment is
still rather depressing, the president of Renault Nissan, the world's
fourth-largest automaker, Carlos Ghosn told the media, speaking at
the 83rd Geneva Motor Show.
"Capacity
is a problem and competitiveness is a problem but these are of second
and third magnitude in comparison to the fact that the total market
is collapsing," Carlos Ghosn told CNBC.
Industry
leaders have expressed pessimism about the European car market
recovering any time soon. Stephen Odell, CEO at Ford Europe admitted
the market would continue to fall again this year.
"The
way we count Western Europe we would expect it's down between 3 to 5
percent. So it's very tough and difficult," Odell told CNBC.
"Frankly,
who knows what happens in the second half," he said, as reported
by Reuters, adding it could take four or five years for the European
market to recover to the 17-million to 18-million vehicle sales range
seen in 2007, before the global financial crisis erupted.
Even
the CEO of luxury car maker Jaguar Land Rover admitted sales in
Europe were "challenging" and would remain so for "years
to come."
"Overall
it's challenging especially in the south of Europe but there are some
good opportunities in Eastern Europe and the UK is stable,"
Ralph Speth told CNBC.
Chief
executive Norbert Reithofer of German premium carmaker BMW similarly
warned of a long haul to recovery.
"We
believe that the underlying problem in Europe, which is mainly about
debt, will persist for at least five more years," Mr Reithofer
told Reuters.
A
Europe-wide strategy to deal with the industry's issues is needed, Mr
Ghosn told the Sky news.
"There
should be some kind of European strategy encompassing support for
specific technologies, support for the development of specific
products," he said.
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