Saturday, December 28, 2024

China car companies seek 25% tax on EU rivals, state media says

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Chinese car companies have called on Beijing to hit European Union rivals with import taxes of up to 25% if the trading bloc imposes tariffs on vehicles from China, the country’s state media has reported.

The demand was reportedly made at a closed-door meeting organised by China’s Ministry of Commerce, which was also attended by representatives of European car firms.

The measures would target cars from the EU with large petrol-driven engines.

Last week, the EU threatened Chinese electric vehicle (EV) makers with tariffs of up to 38% from 4 July.

The meeting in Beijing was attended by four Chinese and six European car companies, according to an article published by a social media account affiliated with state broadcaster CCTV.

German car making giant Volkswagen has confirmed to the BBC that it was present at the meeting but declined to comment on what was discussed.

Porsche declined to comment, while BMW did not immediately reply when contacted by the BBC.

“China’s car companies called on the government to adopt firm countermeasures against the EU,” the report said.

“It is suggested that within the limits allowed by Word Trade Organization rules, a higher provisional tariff be imposed on large-displacement petrol vehicles imported from Europe.”

The reports echo an article published last month by the state-run newspaper Global Times, which said 25% tariffs should apply to cars with petrol engines larger than 2.5 litres.

The move would target “luxury or ultra luxury” vehicles, meaning “an additional tax is not likely to make much of a difference on volumes,” Bill Russo, from advisory firm Automobility, told the BBC.

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