Auto tariffs – are they up, down or unchanged
Vietnam’s car dealers are perplexed by a newly-promulgated import tariff on
used cars that seems to roll back the rates to 2006 levels.
Circular
#216 signed by Deputy Minister of Finance Do Hoang Anh Tuan on November 12 says
that beginning January 1, 2010, ‘passenger-carrying vehicles with less than 15
seats’ . . . will bear the fixed tariff rate stipulated in the Decision No 69
(2006).
Decision
69 sets up a tariff on imports of used cars and allows the Ministry of Finance
to raise or lower it by 20 percent.
Meanwhile,
if referring to the Decision 69, stipulating tariffs on used cars, car dealers
have realized that the majority of vehicles will enjoy the tariff decrease,
while only a few models will see the tariff increase by some $2,000 per unit.
Under
Decision 69, models with five seats and less and cylinder capacity of less than
one litre, have an indicative tariff of $3,000. Models with the cylinder
capacity of 1.5L to 2.0L bear an indicative tariff of $7,000. Meanwhile, the
models with higher cylinder capacities will bear a tariff of from $10,000 up to
$25,000 (for models of more than 5.0 liters).
Comparing
the tariff schedule stipulated in Decision 69, with the rates stipulated in
Decision 23 of May 8, 2008, that Vietnam is currently applying, it appears that
the tariffs will decrease from $500 to $5000 per car seating five persons or
less.
Similarly,
the tax on models with six to nine seats will apparently decrease by $1.800 to
4,000.
Car
dealers agree that if the import tariff decreases by $5,000 on average, the
price of cars may decrease by up to $7,500.
Here’s
the problem: car dealers are not sure they have properly interpreted the
decision of the Finance Ministry. They are having trouble imagining why tax
rates will be rolled back to the levels that prevailed in 2006.
VnExpress
quotes a car company owner in HCM City. Recently the Ministry of Finance has
stressed its intention to maintain policy stability and minimize changes in the
tariff, he says. For example, the Finance Ministry opposed the Ministry of
Industry and Trade’s proposal in September to raise tariffs on imported cars.
“That’s why I have some doubts that this tax decision will upset the present
policy.”
A car
importer in Hanoi known for his caution says that he has polled his contacts,
asking if the tariffs will increase or decrease and why the Ministry of Finance
has released a decision on tax imposition at this time.
The car
importer stressed that a tariff decrease would be ‘abnormal’ under current
conditions, when Vietnam is worried about a widening trade deficit. He thinks
that surely Government does not want to encourage used car imports right now.
“However, all my contacts – and these are well-informed people – are equally
perplexed. Some of them do not believe in the new tax schedule is for real,” he
said.
VnExpress
adds that the General Department of Customs has stressed that it has not
received any instruction relating to the changes in the tariffs on used cars
and, as far as it knows, the tariff on imported used cars to be applied in 2010
has not changed. The Customs Department is a unit of the Finance Ministry.
At the
ministry, there’s surprise at the various conflicting interpretations. One
official says that the 2010 tariffs will be the same as they are currently, and
that he can’t imagine why Circular #216 has stirred up the auto sector. He
added that the Finance Ministry will reexamine it and issue further guidance.