Auto industry body Siam today cut the growth forecast for passenger vehicles sales for the ongoing and next fiscals, expecting demand to suffer due to infrastructure cess of up to 4% announced in the Budget.
Society of Indian Automobile Manufacturers (Siam) has pegged the sales growth for passenger vehicles (PVs) at 6-8% this fiscal and 11% for the next.
"Although we had forecast initially in the beginning of this fiscal that we expect growth of PVs to be 6-8%, we have increased it to around 10% when sales picked up during the year. Now due to the infrastructure cess we are revising it back to 6-8%," Siam Deputy Director General Sugato Sen told PTI.
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Explaining the rationale, he said, "Usually March is a good month for the auto industry from a sales point of view but this year it may not be after post Budget announcements. This March is going to be a difficult one."
Car sales have dropped for two consecutive months in January and February after 14 straight months of growth.
Total domestic passenger vehicle sales in April-February stood at 25,32,736 units as against 23,55,991 units in the year-ago period, up 7.5%.
In Budget 2016-17, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley had announced infrastructure cess of of 1% on petrol/ LPG/CNG driven vehicles of length not exceeding 4 meter and engine capacity not exceeding 1,200cc.
Singling out diesel vehicles in the aftermath of pollution problems in the national capital, he also imposed 2.5% cess on diesel vehicles of length not exceeding 4 meter and engine capacity not exceeding 1,500cc, while higher engine capacity and SUVs and bigger sedans were slapped a cess of 4% on the value of the car.
The minister also proposed "to collect tax at source at the rate of 1% on purchase of luxury cars exceeding value of Rs 10 lakh".
When asked about impact on the cess on sales in the next fiscal, Sen said: "We had initially said the PVs will grow around 12% but now it has been revised downward to 11%."
He, however, said different measures announced in Budget, specially for investments in infrastructure and steps to boost the rural economy will help demand for automobiles overall in the long term.