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China Imposes Additional 10 Per Cent Tax On Supercars

China has imposed an extra 10 per cent tax on ultra-high-end cars and supercars costing over 1.3 million yuan (Rs. 1.28 crore) such as Lamborghinis and Ferraris, the government said, the latest step in a wide crackdown on conspicuous luxury consumption.
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By AFP

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1 mins read

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Published on December 3, 2016

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Highlights

  • China has imposed an extra 10% tax on ultra-high-end cars
  • Tax will be levied on cars costing over 1.3 million Yuan i.e. Rs. 1.28 Cr
  • China already imposes 25% tax on all foreign cars shipped to China
China has imposed an extra 10 per cent tax on ultra-high-end cars and supercars costing over 1.3 million yuan (Rs. 1.28 crore) such as Lamborghinis and Ferraris, the government said, the latest step in a wide crackdown on conspicuous luxury consumption. Under President Xi Jinping the Communist Party has overseen a sprawling campaign against graft and encouraged thrift among the country's political and economic elites, targeting showy displays of wealth.

The new tax took effect Thursday and was intended to "guide rational consumption" and promote energy-efficient vehicles, the finance ministry said in a statement late Wednesday. "The tax increase is a display of the government's attitude of advocating frugality," said Cui Dongshu, secretary-general of the Passenger Car Association, according to Bloomberg News.

China already taxes imported vehicles at a high rate, slapping a 25 per cent tax on all foreign cars shipped to China. The duties -- and increased competition from cheaper domestic marques -- have driven overall car imports down two years in a row, with 850,000 vehicles imported in the first 10 months of the year, down 6.4 per cent from 2015, according to customs statistics. But ultra-high-end brands such as Ferrari have done well, with the Italian sports-car maker seeing a 26 per cent surge in its second-quarter sales this year, with 160 units delivered.

The extra charge will likely hit Ferrari and brands such as Aston Martin, Rolls-Royce, and Lamborghini, as well as top-end models of Mercedes and BMW. Luxury carmakers have seen massive growth in China, the world's largest auto market, despite the anti-corruption campaign. They have also become potent symbols of the lavish lifestyles of the nouveaux riches during a time of surging wealth inequality.

Elite families often hire fleets of pricey cars for wedding processions, and wealthy second-generation heirs film themselves racing ultra-luxury sports cars in cities at night. A notorious 2012 Ferrari crash that killed the son of a high-level official disrupted a once-in-a-decade party leadership change and precipitated his father's downfall. Reports said the son was accompanied in the car by two female passengers, one of them naked.

Some luxury dealers said they planned to stay open all night Wednesday to take orders before the tax came into force. Passenger vehicle sales in China surged by an average of more than 12 per cent annually from 2010 to 2015, but an economic slowdown has reduced the speed, with expansion dropping to 4.7 per cent last year with total sales of 24.6 million.

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