With Exports Down by Half Brazilian Carmakers Urge Lower Export Taxes

Brazilian auto industry An old request of Brazilian businessmen, lower export taxes, was one of the main proposals presented last Friday, May 8, by executives in the auto industry, including steel mills, as solutions for Brazil to halt the reduction in shipments of manufactured goods, during a meeting with the minister of Development, Industry and Foreign Trade, Miguel Jorge, at the regional headquarters of the Brazilian Development Bank (BNDES), in the city of São Paulo.

Both the government and auto industry businessmen are concerned over the current scenario, according to Jackson Schneider, president of the National Association of Vehicle Manufacturers (Anfavea).

"It is a natural concern," said the executive, who said that he handed an accounting statement to Miguel Jorge on the reduction of export volume from January to April this year.

According to him, in terms of number of units, the export volume decreased to nearly half the amount recorded during the same period of last year. That is equivalent to approximately 130,000 units less than in the period ranging from January to April 2008.

To the president of the Brazilian Association of Auto Parts Manufacturers (Sindipeças), Paulo Butori, the tax burden on exported products must be analyzed carefully, because in a moment of crisis "competitiveness, which is very much linked to the amount of tax collected, is greatly reduced."

He warned that many countries have reduced tax on their products in order to gain market share, which in his understanding is the solution for halting the decrease in volume shipped.

The auto parts industry alone, according to Butori, recorded a US$ 580 million deficit in the four-month period, compared with the same period of 2008. "We are experiencing a shortage of buyers for our products in the foreign market." In all of last year, the industry exported roughly the equivalent to US$ 10 billion.

Butori stated that that implies higher unemployment rates in Brazil. He expects the subject to be brought up for discussion with the Brazilian president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.

ABr

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil Software Exports Triple to Paltry US$ 314 Million

Brazilian software export tripled in three years, rising from US$ 100 million in 2002, ...

Elections keep the status quo

Brazilians are going to the polls for the runoff election November 15. But for ...

Brazil Closes Brothels and Hides Their Billboards During the Grand Prix

São Paulo’s mayor, José Serra, ordered the removal of racy billboards of half-naked women ...

Brazil Under Siege by Criminal Gang: 77 Killed, 61 Buses Set on Fire

Since late Friday night, May 12, the state of São Paulo, Brazil’s richest and ...

After 9% Growth in 2007, Construction in Brazil to Expand 10% This Year

Brazil's civil construction sector grew 9% last year and should grow another 10% this ...

Greepeacers Protest Brazil’s Nukes and Go to Jail

As a form of protest, 11 Greenpeace activists sealed the doors today at the ...

‘Lula Is Hostage of Previous Administration’s Policies,’ Says Brazil’s MST

Marina dos Santos, of the Brazilian Landless Movement’s (MST) National Coordinating Body, discusses the ...

Portugal Invests Over Half a Billion Dollars in Brazil. A 49% Jump

Direct investment in Brazil from Portugal rose 48.9% in 2007 in comparison with the ...

Despite Crisis Brazil to Invest US$ 9 Billion in New Ethanol Plants in 2009

Whatever hardships the next sugarcane crop may undergo "the solidness of the sector fundamentals ...

Most Brazilians Expecting Unemployment to Become Worse

Compared with the previous quarter, the Brazilian population’s expectations for inflation improved, while perceptions ...