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Pakistan’s Japanese-dominated car market set to attract Europe and Korea

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Pakistan’s Japanese-dominated car market set to attract Europe and Korea
930867-carworld-1438489984-276-640x480.png

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s car market has been dominated by Japanese automakers for decades, but a mini-economic revival looks set to attract new players from Europe and Korea into the mix.

Despite heavy taxation on imported vehicles, enthusiasm for owning a car in Pakistan has remained undented — thanks in part to underdeveloped public transport in the country’s sprawling cities, but also the social status it brings.

Toyota, Suzuki and Honda car assembly plants already work around the clock in Karachi and eastern Lahore — yet customers can still wait for up to four months for new vehicles to be delivered.

Now demand for cars in the South Asian giant of 200 million people is accelerating even more quickly, as economic growth has reached its fastest pace since 2008 while renewed investor confidence and easing inflation have spurred consumer spending.

Keen to cash in, a delegation from German auto giant Volkswagen visited the country in recent weeks, according to Pakistani officials and German diplomats.

Company spokesperson Christoph Adomat told AFP that while “Volkswagen is constantly evaluating market opportunities on a worldwide basis… there are no decisions for an investment from Volkswagen side in Pakistan”.

Miftah Ismail, the chairman of Pakistan Board of Investment who took part in the talks, said Volkswagen was not the only company expressing an interest.

“There are a number of other companies from (South) Korea and Europe that we are talking to who are thinking of setting up assembly plants in Pakistan,” he said, without naming the firms.

US and European cars dominated Pakistan’s roads in the early years after it gained independence from Britain in 1947.

But fuel prices made their compact, efficient Japanese rivals more popular and from the 1960s onwards manufacturers like Toyota, Suzuki and Honda gained a stranglehold on the market.

Italy’s Fiat made a brief foray in the 1990s, while South Korea’s Hyundai as well as Daewoo-owned Chevrolet tried — and failed — to gain a foothold in the 2000s before the financial crisis forced them to exit.

Because Pakistan charges heavy duties on imported cars less than three years old, Japanese companies with in-country assembly operations can set prices significantly above the regional average.

The bottom-of-the-range Suzuki Mehran costs the equivalent of $6,300 in Pakistan but sells for around $3,900 in India. The most popular Corolla 1.3 sedan starts at 1.6 million rupees, but buyers have to wait months or pay $1,500 for prompt delivery.

The news that Volkswagen was exploring options to enter the Pakistani market has excited car enthusiasts, who are tired of high prices and limited choices.

“I think it is a great idea because Volkswagen cars are value for money and reliability,” said Romano Karim, a fan of the classic Volkswagen Beetles from the 60s and 70s that can often be seen on Pakistan’s roads.

Haji Mohammad Shahzad, chairman of the All Pakistan Motor Dealers Association, added that having Volkswagen in the market would help drive costs down.

“The monopoly of big three could be broken if Volkswagen produces at least 20,000-25,000 cars annually,” Shahzad told AFP.

Global auto giants are attracted by Pakistan’s booming economy, which the International Monetary Fund predicts will grow by 4.5 per cent in the next financial year.

Investor confidence in the medium-sized economy of $232 billion has improved since a new business-friendly government led by Nawaz Sharif took power in 2013, with Karachi’s share market among the world’s top 10 performers in the past year.

The country is also undergoing a major construction boom driven by Chinese investment after President Xi Jinping visited Islamabad in April to unveil a $46 billion investment plan known as the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor.

Car sales have also boomed thanks to the growth of car leasing and financing facilities. Sales in the 11 months to May this year rose 30 per cent from a year earlier, according to industry group the Pakistan Automotive Manufacturers Association.

Baber Kaleem Khan, editor of PakWheels.com magazine, said Volkswagen would be well poised to tap into the lower to mid-range market.

“Pakistani automakers haven’t really had much competition because their respective domains are well protected by monopolistic business practices,” Khan told AFP.

“But given VW’s impressive small-range of vehicles, the German automaker can take the market from the ground up and start working to the top.”
 
VW would be an excellent addition to the market.
 
Highly unlikely. Pakistan's auto world is full of corruption.
They have more than enough money to feed politician and block the new comers by any mean.

Still today's Toyota basic XLI is without ABS and airbags. Nothing to talk about Suzuki's $hit.
 
The news piece is based on a delegations visit to Pakistan there is nothing materialistic however we have just about enough of those Suzuki mehrans & Altos , Toyota corrolla and honda civics ... Volkswagen will be a refreshing change
 
Pakistan could easily import cars from Iran / China at cheaper rates.

Japanese cars are assembled in Pakistan , they promised full transfer of technology to make cars fully in Pakistan but that promise has not resulted in Pakistani manufacturer making more then 20-30 % of the car parts so last 30 years have been wasted in that venture

All pakistanis got was SUZUKI mehran crap car

MehranColorWhiteb.jpg


Of course its shi...t ....

Zero , protection for collision
No efficiency in gas
Car looks like it will break down if it hit a road bump



If Suzuki were smart they could have brought in some better models into Pakistan and took over the market but they stayed with Mehran crap and now their days are numbered


Look at the shitt...y interior of engine !!!

5-suzuki-mehran-2014-vxr-euro-ii-796-petrol-manual.jpg


A university project car would look better



Compare to a car that has sign of "ENGINEERING" inside it and parts that reflect the engineering
2015-ford-mustang-mule-engine-view.jpg




Japanese have run the SCAM far too long , to take $$$ from Pakistani car buyers and selling them crap Mehran



I mean look at MEHRAN it does not even have a HEAT SHEILD !!!



Just introduce FORD or GM into Pakistan get the Mehran shit out


FORD
fcs15_highlight_lg_titanium.jpg



Ford Fiesta
ST-Octane-Academy-Fiesta-18.jpg



GM Malibu
forward-thinking.jpg

chev_mali_int_ph_big_01.jpg

 
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Pakistan’s Japanese-dominated car market set to attract Europe and Korea
930867-carworld-1438489984-276-640x480.png

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s car market has been dominated by Japanese automakers for decades, but a mini-economic revival looks set to attract new players from Europe and Korea into the mix.

Despite heavy taxation on imported vehicles, enthusiasm for owning a car in Pakistan has remained undented — thanks in part to underdeveloped public transport in the country’s sprawling cities, but also the social status it brings.

Toyota, Suzuki and Honda car assembly plants already work around the clock in Karachi and eastern Lahore — yet customers can still wait for up to four months for new vehicles to be delivered.

Now demand for cars in the South Asian giant of 200 million people is accelerating even more quickly, as economic growth has reached its fastest pace since 2008 while renewed investor confidence and easing inflation have spurred consumer spending.

Keen to cash in, a delegation from German auto giant Volkswagen visited the country in recent weeks, according to Pakistani officials and German diplomats.

Company spokesperson Christoph Adomat told AFP that while “Volkswagen is constantly evaluating market opportunities on a worldwide basis… there are no decisions for an investment from Volkswagen side in Pakistan”.

Miftah Ismail, the chairman of Pakistan Board of Investment who took part in the talks, said Volkswagen was not the only company expressing an interest.

“There are a number of other companies from (South) Korea and Europe that we are talking to who are thinking of setting up assembly plants in Pakistan,” he said, without naming the firms.

US and European cars dominated Pakistan’s roads in the early years after it gained independence from Britain in 1947.

But fuel prices made their compact, efficient Japanese rivals more popular and from the 1960s onwards manufacturers like Toyota, Suzuki and Honda gained a stranglehold on the market.

Italy’s Fiat made a brief foray in the 1990s, while South Korea’s Hyundai as well as Daewoo-owned Chevrolet tried — and failed — to gain a foothold in the 2000s before the financial crisis forced them to exit.

Because Pakistan charges heavy duties on imported cars less than three years old, Japanese companies with in-country assembly operations can set prices significantly above the regional average.

The bottom-of-the-range Suzuki Mehran costs the equivalent of $6,300 in Pakistan but sells for around $3,900 in India. The most popular Corolla 1.3 sedan starts at 1.6 million rupees, but buyers have to wait months or pay $1,500 for prompt delivery.

The news that Volkswagen was exploring options to enter the Pakistani market has excited car enthusiasts, who are tired of high prices and limited choices.

“I think it is a great idea because Volkswagen cars are value for money and reliability,” said Romano Karim, a fan of the classic Volkswagen Beetles from the 60s and 70s that can often be seen on Pakistan’s roads.

Haji Mohammad Shahzad, chairman of the All Pakistan Motor Dealers Association, added that having Volkswagen in the market would help drive costs down.

“The monopoly of big three could be broken if Volkswagen produces at least 20,000-25,000 cars annually,” Shahzad told AFP.

Global auto giants are attracted by Pakistan’s booming economy, which the International Monetary Fund predicts will grow by 4.5 per cent in the next financial year.

Investor confidence in the medium-sized economy of $232 billion has improved since a new business-friendly government led by Nawaz Sharif took power in 2013, with Karachi’s share market among the world’s top 10 performers in the past year.

The country is also undergoing a major construction boom driven by Chinese investment after President Xi Jinping visited Islamabad in April to unveil a $46 billion investment plan known as the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor.

Car sales have also boomed thanks to the growth of car leasing and financing facilities. Sales in the 11 months to May this year rose 30 per cent from a year earlier, according to industry group the Pakistan Automotive Manufacturers Association.

Baber Kaleem Khan, editor of PakWheels.com magazine, said Volkswagen would be well poised to tap into the lower to mid-range market.

“Pakistani automakers haven’t really had much competition because their respective domains are well protected by monopolistic business practices,” Khan told AFP.

“But given VW’s impressive small-range of vehicles, the German automaker can take the market from the ground up and start working to the top.”

@Nihonjin1051 any reason why Japanese cis are exploiting innocent Pakistanis so much
 
@AZADPAKISTAN2009, I agree with your post. India got a lot of tech from Japanese car-makers while we got nothing except crappy models from the 80s.
If the taxes are lowered, Pakistani consumers can easily afford better cars. There's no reason for us to stick with garbage that nobody else wants.

Another example is the motorcycle industry. We are still stuck with antique designs while the world has discarded them completely.
 
For the Labour Class, considering the close economic ties between US/Pakistan don't see why FORD / GM vehicles are not in Pakistan

For the quality these car bring they last Winter storms of Himalayas (5-6 years) in Pakistan weather I am sure these beasts can run for 10 years

FORD !!! Best vehicles
DSC01961-960x560w.jpg


Heck would even be useful in Military

Not this crap from the "S" company

suzuki-ravi-2012-front-picture.jpg
 
let Inidan players in and you can drive this beast home for a little more than 30Lakh PKR ( High end)

xuv%2520500%2520white.jpg

This is exhibition car... most likely designed by some Italian designer, but this is not under production.

Any Pakistani business man can make contract with Mercedes for Engines and import assembly unit and there you go, 10 times better than what any bharti can ever dream.

P.S.: In history Pakistan had all UK, European and American auto brands... which could be seen on roads of Lahore as late as 80's. This was a time when human powered rickshaw ride was a dream of every bharti.

For the Labour Class

FORD !!! Best vehicles
DSC01961-960x560w.jpg


Heck would even be useful in Military

Do you know the size of the engine... it will be minimum 3.5 liter @MastanKhan ... come and put some sense to the fan boys, here as well.
 
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Regardless of the cc or capacity of engine , the focus should be on "QUALITY" vehicles when you spend money you get a vehicle that is

a) Safe
b) Produces no emissions
c) Reliable
d) Modern technology

If we go by CC value might as well stick to Tanga

If Pakistani has 10 Lakh rupees , and if he can get a FORD or GM for 10-14 Lakhs , what would you think he would spend his money on !!

Germany did not provide Submarine to Pakistan so VW should be allowed in Pakistan
 

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