Though General Motors is finding big success in China among its brands, the automaker is still a bit player in Japan, and not because of so-called nontariff hurdles.
Automotive News reports Yanase & Co. CEO Takeyoshi Ide proclaims internal apathy, not external policy, as the reasoning behind GM's current status in Japan. As one example, Ide — whose Cadillac and Chevrolet dealerships number at 13, down from a peak 114 — says if the automaker would consider building more RHD vehicles suited for the Japanese market, especially Cadillacs, sales of 5,000 units annually would be "not so difficult."
He has hope that a few moves affecting Cadillac, such as the hiring of former Infiniti chief Johan de Nysschen, would make the change "GM's original people" from Detroit haven't been able to undergo to bring success to the automaker's premium brand. It's also the reason why Ide hasn't let go of his remaining GM dealerships despite also being the nation's No. 1 Mercedes dealer, as well as one of its top sellers of Audi and BMW vehicles.
As for external issues affecting GM, Ide says policy is not among them — Japan imposes no tariffs on imported vehicles — and is just an excuse for the United States government to maintain its tariffs, including the infamous Chicken Tax.
That said, hope may be fading as it is. The sales forecast for 2014 remains flat at 1,200 units for GM's efforts in Japan, higher than its nadir of 700 for all of 2009, yet lower than its zenith of 47,000 units in 1996. Additionally, while Mercedes moved 31,291 vehicles onto the streets of Tokyo through July 2014, Cadillac saw its sales fall 27 percent to 425 units compared to the same period in 2013.
The post Ide: Apathy, Not Policy, Is Behind GM's Japanese Blues appeared first on The Truth About Cars.
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