Domestic annual car sales are set to be in the negative territory for the first time in a decade with industry body SIAM on Monday saying it's growth forecast of 0-1 per cent for this fiscal will not be met as gloomy macro-economic factors and negative sentiments continue to hit demand.
The statement by Society of Indian Automobile Manufacturers (SIAM), comes on the back of January numbers also showing a decline of 12.45 per cent, the third consecutive monthly decline since November last year.
According to its latest data, domestic passenger car sales declined to 173,420 units in January this year compared to 198,079 units in the same month of 2012.
Worried by the performance of the industry, SIAM called for government intervention in the form of reduction in excise duties in the Budget and special schemes for commercial vehicles under Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM) to boost the sector.
"The way car sales are at the moment, we may not be able to meet the forecast of 0-1 per cent growth for the domestic passenger cars we made last month. It will be in the negative territory this fiscal," SIAM Director General Vishnu Mathur told reporters here.
In January SIAM had lowered car sales growth projection to just 0-1 per cent for this fiscal, from 1-3 per cent and 9-11 per cent announced in October and July, 2012 respectively. In April last year, it had forecast a growth of 10-12 per cent for 2012-13.
The last time car domestic sales witnessed a decline was in 2002-2003, when it dropped by 2.09 per cent, he added. In between, the lowest growth was witnessed during the 2008-09 global downturn, when car sales in the domestic market grew by just 1.39 per cent.
"In the April-January period this fiscal, the domestic passenger car sales have declined by 1.8 per cent to 15,56,283 units compared to the year-ago period. The overall economic situation is low and the consumer sentiments are deeply negative despite the recent notional rate cuts by the RBI," Mathur said, adding even new model launches have not been able to have a major uplifting impact.
He said the auto industry has put forward demands to the government to reduce excise duties on small cars to 10 per cent and big cars to 22 per cent in the upcoming Budget.
"Also we have asked for special schemes under JNNURM, as was done in 2008-09 to support state transport undertakings to purchase new buses for fleet upgradation," Mathur added.
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