The
Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Mr. Olusegun Aganga, has affirmed that
import duty on used cars remains 35 per cent
He
also said that there was no truth in media reports that duty on used cars had
been increased to 70 per cent with effect from July 1 based on the new National
Automotive Policy.
Aganga
said this in an interview with State House correspondents at the end of the
weekly Federal Executive Council meeting, where he said the council members
were appropriately briefed in order to correct the misrepresentation.
The
minister explained that all those assembling cars in the country would be
allowed to import at 35 per cent duty to bridge the gap that might arise between
demand and supply.
He,
however, said the 70 per cent duty would be applicable to those who were not
ready to assemble cars locally but preferred to engage in trading by bringing
the vehicles from abroad.
Aganga
said, “The article (media report) had claimed that the duty on used cars is now
70 per cent from yesterday (July 1); that is incorrect. It is 35 per cent. It
also claimed that all used cars now coming into the country would pay duty of
70 per cent; that again, is incorrect.
“For
all those in the auto policy programme, all those assembling cars in the
programme; the policy is that they will be able to import cars to meet the gap
when you look at production and the demand in the country; they would be able
to import those cars at 35 per cent; so, it is not 70 per cent.
“It
is only for those who are putting strain on our foreign reserves, those who
have no intention of creating jobs, those who want to continue to remain
traders that the 70 per cent applies to and this is to discourage trading.
“It
is to encourage local assembly and job creation, and stop unnecessary pressure
on our foreign reserves. So, it is an economic issue and it is very
deliberate.”
“Why will you import cars at 70 per cent while
others are importing at 35 per cent? So, we do not expect to see anyone
importing cars at 70 per cent. It was just a measure to encourage people to go
within the policy group.”
“When
you look at the blended rate of those in the auto programme for the CKDs, SKD 1
and SKD 2 they bring to the country, they only pay duty of zero per cent, five
per cent and 10 per cent, respectively.
“So
when you look at the blended rate of what they produce locally and what they
import, it is just above 20 per cent. That is the policy and that is why all
the manufacturers and assemblers of cars, including some of the major
distributors of cars and importers of cars have given an undertaking they will
not increase their prices at all. Anyone who wants to buy cars from anyone of
them, they will find out that none of them plans to or has increased prices at
all.”
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