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Business
Print Edition> Business
UPDATED: September 1, 2014 NO. 36 SEPTEMBER 4, 2014
Stuck in First Gear?
Chinese automakers have a long way to go before catching up with their foreign rivals
By Deng Yaqing
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IN THE PLANT: Hawtai workers test a car in the company's Tianjin production facility on August 19 (DENG YAQING)

Tianjin, a major industrial city along the western coast of Bohai Bay in north China, has become a new foothold for domestic automaker Hawtai Motor Group's business expansion. Before its production facilities in Tianjin went into operation on May 28, the company had already established manufacturing bases in Shandong Province, Jilin Province and Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region.

"Hawtai will make full use of the international shipping and logistics resources in Tianjin to export our cars to overseas markets," Sinmo Zhang, Human Resource and Administration Manager of Hawtai's Tianjin unit, told Beijing Review.

As a late starter in the auto market, Hawtai places more stock in overseas markets like Russia and Southeast Asian and Middle Eastern countries than the Chinese market. According to statistics from Hawtai, its sales in China in the first half of the year totaled a mere 16,000 units in stark contrast to the 50,000 units sold overseas, though it aims to sell 85,000 units in 2014 in the Chinese market.

Hawtai is not the only domestic automaker that has suffered a weak demand on the home front. According to statistics from Zhejiang Geely Holding Group, the private automaker sold 187,000 units in the first half of this year, down 29 percent year on year.

In addition, the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers (CAAM) reported, in the first half of the year, domestic brands' share of the Chinese auto market fell 3.1 percent and the share for sedans 5.4 percent.

"Despite the geographical and cost advantages held by domestic automakers, they cannot compete with their foreign rivals for a slice of the Chinese market. In effect, domestic automakers are in the position of 'playing catch up' and thus have to deal with pressures and overcome an array of challenges," Zhang claimed.

Left behind

Since Chinese automakers started much later in the game than their overseas counterparts, they have been lagging behind in terms of technology, brand promotion and after-sales services, said Qiao Liang, an executive director of the Society of Automotive Engineers of China.

Jia Xinguang, managing director of the China Automobile Dealers Association, noted that since entering the World Trade Organization, foreign automakers and their joint ventures in China have wasted no time in grabbing the lion's share of the Chinese auto market. It's almost impossible for domestic brands to turn around the situation given their respective weaknesses in technology, capital and popularity.

As Chinese consumers become increasingly wealthy, they tend to care about not just price, but also comfort and the brand. Now, the limited selection of models produced by domestic automakers will not suffice for Chinese consumers, which has caused them to lose consumers to foreign brands, Jia said.

In addition, the prices of cars manufactured by foreign automakers' joint ventures in China have been on the decline in recent years, and some models even fell by 40,000 ($6,511) to 50,000 yuan ($8,139), dealing a crippling blow to their domestic rivals who mainly subsist on delivering higher cost performance.

According to statistics from the CAAM, in the first seven months of this year, Shanghai-Volkswagen, FAW-Volkswagen and Shanghai-General Motors—all Sino-foreign auto joint ventures—ranked in the top three among sedan makers by sales volume, selling 940,000 units, 895,500 units and 806,900 units, respectively, far exceeding the sales of domestic brands.

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