BEIJING -- The China Association of Automobile Manufacturers said Thursday that the country's auto sales are likely to hit 20 million units in 2012 if the economy picks up momentum in the second half.
Total vehicle sales in China will expand by around 8 percent from a year earlier, the CAAM said in a report.
Vehicles are stuck in heavy traffic at the Third Ring Road in Beijing, July 27, 2012. China's passenger car sales could rise 11.1 percent this year, faster than previously forecast and picking up from the first half of the year, a leading industry group in the world's biggest automobile market was cited as saying on July 26, 2012. [Photo/Agencies]
|
For the entire year, sales of passenger cars will rise 11 percent to 16 million vehicles, while commercial vehicle sales will drop 3 percent to 3.9 million units.
The country will import 1.2 million vehicles, up 15 percent, and export 1.05 million vehicles, up 24 percent. Taking imports and exports into consideration, the country's auto sales would reach 20.15 million vehicles, the report said.
"If the economy maintains the status quo and there are no car purchasing restrictions, total vehicle sales in China will grow around 5 percent this year," said Shi Jianhua, deputy secretary general of the CAAM.
Auto sales grew 2.9 percent in the first half of 2012 from a year earlier to 9.6 million vehicles, the CAAM data showed.
It indicates obvious signs of slowing compared with the 3.4-percent gain registered in the same period last year and a 48-percent surge in the first half of 2010, the CAAM said.
A slowdown in auto sales echoes signs of slowing growth in the wider economy. As the world's largest auto producer and market, China is now under the shadow of clearly slowed economic growth.
As a combined result of sluggish external demands, government control on the property sector and the self-initiated structural shift toward domestic demand, China GDP growth slowed to 7.6 percent in the second quarter, the lowest quarterly expansion in three years.