The UK motor industry faces the threat of a £4.5 billion car tariff if the country does not stay in a single EU market, according to the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders’ president Gareth Jones.
Analysis from the SMMT suggests that EU tariffs on cars could add an annual £2.7bn to imports and £1.8bn to exports. The UK motor industry body also said tariffs could push up the list price of cars imported to the UK from the Continent by an average of £1500 if brands and retailers were unable absorb the extra costs. That figure is based on a 10% standard tariff on cars exported to and imported from the EU.
Speaking at the SMMT’s centenary annual dinner, Jones said its members – car manufacturers and traders – had told the SMMT what it wanted: ”Membership of the single market, consistency in regulations, access to global talent and global markets and the ability to trade abroad free from barriers and red tape.”
Jones admitted it wouldn’t be an easy task but said the SMMT will continue to make this case to the UK government. “We have the strength of our successful sector behind us and will ensure your voice is heard,” he told the audience at the annual dinner.
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He outlined the current success of UK production for the automotive industry, siting a new record for exports. However, he warned that this was the result of multi-billion-pound investment decisions made years before the EU referendum and could not be taken for granted.
He said: “We need to create the right conditions for future competitiveness, for developing skills and securing the strength of our economy by investing in R&D and enabling new technologies to be developed here in the UK.
"The challenge now is to make a success of the new future. We want a strong UK economy and we want to see the UK's influence in the world enhanced. But this cannot be at the expense of jobs, growth or being an open, welcoming trading nation.”
Commenting on the strength of the relationship between government and industry, Jones said the government had put industrial strategy at the heart of business but added that it faces its toughest challenge in leaving the EU. “We must make the right decisions: on trade, on regulations and on business competitiveness," he said.
UK car registrations in October show modest growth
The SMMT dinner was also used to launch a report called the Digitalisation of Automotive Manufacturing in the UK. It suggests that digital manufacturing through technologies such as 3D printing and artificial intelligence could significantly boost industry turnover. Produced by KPMG, the report predicts it could add £6.9bn annually to industry turnover, including a £2.6bn supply chain boost, amounting to a cumulative total of £74bn by 2035.
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SOME INTERESTING POINTS GUYS
IF THE eEU TRY TO TREAT US LIKE TRAITORS WE SHOULD THREATEN 30 % IMPORT DUTY ON CARS, CHEESE,FOOD WINE CHOCIES ETC AND GIVE HALF BACK TO PROMOTE UK ONSHORING AND STOP THE WASTE OF CAR BODIES BENTLEY AND ROLLS COMING FROM GERMANY TO UK.CHOCIE NOW FROM POLAND SINCE THE FACTORIE SIN YORK CLOSED ETC.sORRY BUT THE CORPORATES JUST APPEAR TO RAPE THE UK,SO SORRY FOR GOING ON A PADDY.
Ski Kid wrote:
Your caps lock is stuck on...
What does going on a paddy mean?
Who's in the driving seat here?
Shooting themselves in the foot springs to mind.
If they want everyone driving around in a Jaguar XE's and Lexus IS' instead of the over rated 3 series or or boring A4. They need to crack on and slap a big tariff on these cars.
Also, The Apprentice, Mini's are made by BMW and are a German made vehicle.
AlphaAlpha274 wrote:
Minis are made in the UK at Oxford not Germany.
AlphaAlpha274 wrote:
Those damn Germans again. They are to blame for everything. Damn them for propping up the EU economy for years and taking 10000's of refugees. No need to worry though, with all that money the NHS will be saving those in the UK will at least be the healthiest post brexit. Healthy and safe on your own little island with no mates.
Reasons
propping up the EU economy for their own good, just ask Greece. Little island, it's fairy big actually and supports at least 60,000,000 people.
xxxx wrote:
It is quite big, it took me 3 whole days to cycle from the bottom to the top once. Didn't see many fairies though.
Really
PAh! tariff free Qashqai,