Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Argentina's Auto Output Falls Again As Exports To Brazil Sag


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Argentina's carmakers rolled out 47,204 vehicles in October-virtually unchanged from September but 9.9% below a year earlier-marking a fourth straight annual decline.

Exports, the industry's lifeblood, reached 29,622 units: a month-on-month uptick, yet still 17.6% lower year over year. Year to date, factories have assembled 426,447 vehicles, up 2.8%, while exports total 229,433, down 10.3%.

Dealers received 44,801 vehicles in October, 17.4% fewer than in September but 2.7% more than a year prior. The story behind the story is dependence. Roughly two-thirds of exported vehicles go to Brazil.

When Brazilian orders soften, Argentine plants trim shifts and suppliers idle capacity. That's exactly what has been happening-export demand has lagged, and production lines feel it first.

Layer on normal but disruptive model changeovers and retooling, plus decisions like Nissan winding down assembly in the country, and the drag on output becomes clearer.

For expats and international readers, this isn't just about cars. Autos are one of Argentina's most complex industrial chains, touching metalworking, plastics, electronics, logistics, and port services.

When exports falter, fewer dollars flow in, making it harder to stabilize prices and plan investment. Households notice through fewer overtime hours; provinces notice through thinner tax receipts; policymakers face slimmer room to maneuver.


Argentina's auto sector seeks stability and clarity
There is also a policy angle that matters for anyone weighing Argentina's prospects. Companies say national tax relief helped at the margin but urge provinces and municipalities to cut layered fees, speed up permits, and streamline logistics.

Clear, rules-based frameworks reduce uncertainty and reward productivity-conditions that tend to attract long-horizon capital.

By contrast, stop-start interventions and shifting costs up and down the supply chain have historically sapped momentum and encouraged short-term fixes over durable growth.

What to watch next: whether Brazilian demand revives into year-end; how quickly new or refreshed models ramp up; and whether subnational governments match federal efforts with practical steps that lift competitiveness.

October's slight monthly stabilization is welcome, but the message is plain: until exports recover and the operating environment becomes more predictable, Argentina's auto output will stay under pressure.

MENAFN07112025007421016031ID1110310941



The Rio Times

Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.

Search