Twenty-four
hours after the new automotive development plan was approved by the
Federal Executive Council, the Federal Government on Thursday said a new
tariff on the importation of cars would be announced soon.
The move will make imported cars more expensive thus, promoting the purchase of locally manufactured vehicles.
The Minister of Industry, Trade and
Investment, Mr. Olusegun Aganga, confirmed the development during a chat
with journalists in Abuja.
Aganga said the old tariff had been
reviewed upwards, adding that the new tariff had already been approved
by the Federal Government.
This, he added, was part of measures to develop the Nigerian automotive industry.
“The importation of Tokunbo vehicles
will not be a major threat to the automotive development plan. The
tariff for the importation of cars has been reviewed upward and will be
announced soon,” he said.
Aganga also said the ministry had
commenced, with immediate effect, the implementation of the Automotive
Industrial Policy Development Plan.
The measures, which were approved by the
Federal Executive Council on Wednesday, according to the minister, will
position Nigeria in the league of auto-producing countries.
He said with the new measures, the
automotive industry would create significant, good quality employment
and a wide range of technologically advanced manufacturing
opportunities.
He said, “In many countries around the
world, the automotive industry plays both strategic and catalytic roles
in economic development, particularly in employment creation and wealth
generation.
“With our current population and
economy, our potential vehicle market is about one million vehicles a
year. This is more than sufficient to support an automotive industry.”
While stating that the manufacture of
vehicles would enable Nigeria to acquire the technologies of mass
production and quality control, Aganga said arrangements were being made
to manufacture new cars that would be sold for between N1.2m and N1.5m.
He said, “Recognising the strategic
effects of the automotive industry in industrialisation, emerging
economies like Brazil, China, Malaysia, India, Iran, Indonesia, Thailand
and South Africa took deliberate steps to develop their automotive
industry between the 1960s and 1980s.
“Nigeria started about the same time in
the 1970s. These countries have, however, developed well advanced
automotive industries now in contrast to Nigeria. The Nigerian auto
development plan will promote investments in the assembly of inexpensive
cars in the country at prices, which Nigerians can afford, and will
gradually substitute the large and growing car imports coming into the
country.”
The Director-General, National
Automotive Council, Mr. Aminu Jalal, said many international automotive
manufacturers in particular, Toyota, Nissan, Renault and General Motors,
had indicated interest to invest in Nigeria following the evolution of
the automotive development plan.
He said, “Nissan, Toyota and others are now conducting a feasibility study on vehicle assembly in Nigeria.
“At full capacity, the Nigerian
automotive industry has the potential to create 70,000 skilled and
semi-skilled jobs along with 210,000 indirect jobs in the Small and
Medium-scale Enterprises sector that will supply the assembly plants.”
Jalal said 490,000 other jobs would also be created in the raw materials supply industries.
He added that importers could still
clear imported vehicles at the old rates until February 28, 2014,
provided “they can prove that they had opened a letter of credit for the
vehicles before October 3, 2013.”
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