Peng Dan has now accustomed himself to driving his new beloved 1.8 liter Ford
Focus on the wandering roads of Southwestern China's Chongqing Municipality.
Ford Focus models are manufactured in China under a joint venture between
Chang'an Group and America's Ford Motor Company. Peng said that he was keeping
an eye on the car when it came on to the market in September last year.
As a well-paid white-collar worker in the IT industry, Peng is one of the few
fortunate Chinese that have enough money to buy a car. "If it were 10 years ago,
I would not consider buying a car," he explained.
Peng bought his Focus in September this year for 130,000 RMB yuan (around
16,000 U.S. dollars), but only after the price had fallen by 3,000 yuan.
Along with Peng, most Chinese people would not buy cars in the 1990s, when an
old-fashioned Volkswagen Santana (which came on to the market in the late 1970s)
cost more than Peng's Focus. Now, however, you can buy a new Santana with a
much-improved performance for almost half of the 1990s price.
The major turning point that resulted in this dramatic fall in car prices in
China took place only five to six years ago, when the country joined the World
Trade Organization (WTO).
Decreasing car prices enable more and more Chinese people like Peng,
especially some newly rich, to enjoy a lifestyle that they once could only
experience in western movies and advertisements.
China was a founding member of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trades
(GATT) in 1947, but withdrew 3 years later in 1950. Since 1986, China focused
its efforts on returning to the GATT. However, by 1995, when the WTO came into
existence and replaced the GATT, China had not achieved its goal and had missed
the opportunity to become a founding member of the new organization.
Obstacles were swept away after China and the United States signed a
bilateral agreement on China's entry to the WTO in November of 1999. After that,
the process accelerated.
Two years later, during the fourth WTO ministerial conference in Doha, Qatar,
a decision on the accession of China into the WTO was made and China eagerly
signed the protocol. Finally, on the 11th December 2001, after fifteen years of
trying, China officially became the 143rd member of the WTO.
As one of the commitments to the WTO, China's average tariff level has
dropped down from 15% in 2001 to just under 10% in 2006. In terms of the tariff
on automobiles, the drop is more significant.
The most recent decrease of the tariff on imported vehicles occurred in July
this year, down from 28% to 25%. In 2001, the tariff on automobiles was as high
as 80% to 100%. Thus, by the middle of this year, China had fully implemented
its WTO commitments to tariff decreases in the automobile industry.
Furthermore, some trade barriers in the car industry, as well as an import
license system, have been abolished so as to stimulate a growth in imports.
Statistics from Chinese Customs show that China's vehicle and vehicle parts
imports have experienced a rapid increase since WTO accession, from $4 billion
in 2001 to almost $16 billion in the first three quarters of 2006.
One reason for the sharp increase in imported vehicles is that they are much
cheaper than before. For example, the price of a Mercedes Benz S600 fell by 1.1
million RMB yuan in 2002. Other luxury cars, such as BMW's and Audi's, were
about 15%-20% cheaper in 2003 than those sold before WTO accession.
Pointing to other benefits of imported vehicles, Li Huanxin, a General Motors
dealer commented that, "Besides the decline of price, imported cars are of
higher quality". Li Huanxin was speaking at the Beijing Automobile Show, which
took place two weeks ago.
In the automobile show, top grade imported cars wowed most of the crowd,
including some of Beijing's super-rich. Cars with sky-high prices on display,
such as Bentley's, Ferrari's and Rolls Royce's, were marked as "sold out."
Li said that cheaper imported vehicles also compel domestic carmakers to
lower their products' prices. In 2002, one year after WTO accession, carmakers
lowered their prices 29 times over the space of 12 months and China's car market
experienced a "blowout." A year later, in 2003, they lowered their prices 60
times.
"Now you can buy a homemade Buick with 160,000 RMB yuan, which would cost
more than 200,000 yuan five years ago", said Li.
Clearly knowing that his Ford Focus would be cheaper in the future, Peng
admitted that he was eager to get on the road. He said that, "The price is
always on the decline, but I cannot keep waiting. I want to enjoy a lifestyle on
wheels."
Li the dealer, however, said that the most remarkable change was that the
threshold for having a car had been lowered.
"The government and companies were once our major customers, but now
increasing numbers of householders buy our cars. Furthermore, young people have
become a major consumption force", said Li, who bought a Buick Sail made by
Shanghai General Motors (GM), two years ago at the age of 26.
Almost all of the international car giants, such as Toyota, Honda, GM,
Volkswagen, and Ford have increased their investment in China with a number of
joint ventures being set up. The cheaper prices that result from these joint
ventures are enabling more and more Chinese people to afford cars.
Consequently, vehicle production in China has rapidly increased. According to
the China Association of Automobiles Manufacturers (CAAM), the vehicle output of
China in 2005 was almost 6 million, making it the third largest car-making
country in the world, only after the United States and Japan.
Commenting on the pros and cons of joint ventures, Prof. Hu Shuhua with Wuhan
University of Technology stated that, "Cooperation with foreign car companies
brings capital and technologies, but also leads to over-dependence on foreign
technologies, and inadequate capacities for independent innovations." Prof. Hu
is somewhat an expert in this field, as he is also head of the National
Automotive Innovation Program's research group, under the auspices of the
Ministry of Science and Technology.
After achieving WTO status, the Chinese media along with some domestic
experts prophesized doom, and their concerns now seem to have been well-founded.
Without a tariff barrier, and with their joint ventures in China,
foreign-branded cars now hold almost 70% of the domestic market share.
Cars with foreign brands are now running all around the country, but
ironically most of them are made in China. Some sections of the audience at the
Beijing Automobile Show expressed a strong interest in these Chinese
manufactured foreign cars.
The Economic Observer recently commented that China's car industry had gained
a domestic market, but had lost its international competitive strength.
In the traditional car industry, small scale implies low productivity and
poor competition. During 2001, the total vehicle output of China accounted for
only one fourth of that of GM, and only four enterprises had an output capacity
of more than 200,000 per year.
Finding themselves in such a predicament, domestic carmakers have started to
try and find ways to take the bull by its horns and tackle the challenge of
competition head-on. One benefit of the joint ventures is that they offer the
benefits of agglomeration economies, in that they are constantly expanding their
own capacities and acquiring new knowledge from the partnership.
For instance, with the know-how learned from its long-term partners GM and
Volkswagen, Shanghai Automobiles Industry Corporation (SAIC) launched its first
self-branded car, the Roewe 750. A new car named Besturn made by First Auto
Works, one of China's largest carmakers, also benefits from technologies used in
the Mazda 6.
Chang'an Group have also introduced a series of self-branded cars recently, a
salesman representing Chang'an at the Beijing Automobile Show commented that,
"We have strengthened capabilities for independent R&D, as we've sensed the
brutal competition." Asking to remain anonymous, the Chang'an salesman's comment
on his company's experience post-WTO accession is representative of that of most
of the domestic car manufacturers.
Nowadays, a number of Chinese-branded cars, such as Chery, Geely, and
Brilliance, are known throughout the country. Their market share is still small,
however, it is on the rise, from 25% last year to 30% in the first five months
this year.
"Homemade cars are now better in quality and technology than before", said Li
Huanxin, who has worked as a car dealer for five years and had clearly witnessed
radical changes in Chinese car industry. He attributed this change to the
benefits of operating alongside foreign car manufacturers, in that they offer an
opportunity to make money in join ventures instead of facing a battle of David
and Goliath.
Statistics show that China exported around 127,000 vehicles over the 19 years
from 1980 to 1998, while nearly 173,000 were exported just in 2005. Thus, the
Chinese car industry has made its impact on the global market, albeit mostly in
Africa, the Middle East and some economically less developed areas.
While celebrating its booming car market, China has also set its goal for the
future. China's high-ranking officials are now paying increasing attention to
Chinese branded cars.
Chinese-branded cars and independent capacities for R&D have also gained
priority in the government's 11th "five-year development program."
Accession to the WTO has helped to develop China's car market, but there is
still a long way ahead. After several years of hiding in the wings of their
foreign counterparts, Chinese car manufacturers now seem to be adapting their
capabilities for direct competition with these car giants in an open market.