BEIJING — China will endeavor to stabilize new car sales, loosen purchase restrictions in certain cities and invigorate the used-car market in a bid to unleash the consumption potential for cars, an official said April 2.
As a pillar of the national economy, the auto industry plays a crucial role in boosting domestic consumption and facilitating consumption upgrades, Wang Bin, deputy director of the Department of Market Operation and Consumption Promotion of the Ministry of Commerce, said at an online press conference.
Car sales accounted for 9.6 percent of the country's total retail sales in 2019, while tax revenues and employment in the auto industry and related industries made up one-tenth of the country's total, he said.
Due to multiple factors, China's car sales have been falling for two consecutive years. Compounded by the COVID-19 epidemic, sales plunged 42 percent year on year during the first two months of the year.
To prop up the market, the government recently announced a slew of measures to unleash demand.
A State Council executive meeting on March 31 decided to extend subsidies and tax exemptions for new energy vehicle purchases by another two years, which were set to expire at the end of this year.
Value-added tax on the sale of old vehicles by second-hand vehicle dealers will be decreased to 0.5 percent of the sales volume from May 1 to the end of 2023, the meeting decided.