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Chinese Auto Sales Jump 78 Percent
By Elaine Kurtenbach, AP Business Writer
Manufacturing.Net - October 13, 2009

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SHANGHAI (AP) -- China's vehicle sales vaulted 78 percent in September from a year earlier, widening a lead over the U.S. as the world's top auto market, with sales spurred by tax cuts and government stimulus spending.

Overall vehicle sales totaled 1.33 million units, while passenger car sales climbed 84 percent to 1.02 million units, the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers reported.

Total sales for the first nine months of the year rose to 9.66 million units, up 34 percent from a year earlier, it said.

September was the seventh month that China's auto sales, boosted by tax cuts and subsidies as part of Beijing's stimulus, exceeded 1.1 million units. Sales in smaller cities have been booming as automakers rush to woo first-time car buyers with new models.

China leads the world in total 2009 sales, with the U.S. in second place with January-September sales at about 7.85 million units. U.S. sales fell 23 percent from a year earlier in September to just under 746,000, following a summer buying spree driven by big discounts to consumers.

Given the weakness in other major markets, global automakers are looking to China to drive revenues amid sluggish demand elsewhere.

General Motors saw total sales for January-September surge 55 percent to nearly 1.3 million vehicles. Ford Motor Co. said sales rose 32 percent in the first nine months of the year to 316,639 units, with sales in September jumping nearly 80 percent from the year before.

Other foreign automakers have reported similar, hefty double-digit sales growth.

China, with 1.3 billion people, has long been expected to overtake the United States as the biggest vehicle market. But the U.S. economic slump hastened that shift by depressing American sales while China surged ahead.

"The China market we expect to surpass the U.S. market in size for both the right and the wrong reasons," General Motors Co.'s CEO Fritz Henderson told reporters in Shanghai on Tuesday.

Henderson predicted a "very modest recovery" in 2010 for the U.S. market.

But China, he said, would continue to enjoy very strong growth.

"The China market has benefited from economic stimulus that has generated primary demand. We see substantial opportunities in product-driven, competition-driven growth," he said.


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My..my..my  10/16/2009 11:48:00 AM
Pretty soon, it seems, that all of us Americans will be driving around in Chinese made pedal carts and all of the Chinese people will be driving around in Chinese made Hummers. Hmm, and how come the Chinese goverment tax cuts and stimulus spending seemed to have worked out so much better than ours did? What's wrong with this picture? How come the Chinese can enjoy an outrageous, nay..decadent, 78% increase in auto sales and here we are struggling along with bankrupt auto manufactures that are selling off their assets to former foreign competitors. Ahh..but did all of these Chinese automobiles that were sold to the Chinese people, meet with the Chinese "Green" police's approvals? Were all of the cars that were sold, were the kind of cars that the Chinese people really wanted? But wait, The Chinese people don't have a real "Green" police, just yet. Just like America used to be, just a few short years back. I don't know, maybe some people think that it would be really way cool to get around in Chinese made pedal carts and you know, "Like Save the Planet, man". After all isn't that how the Chinese got started, about a hundred years ago? Wake up America! Have we exported all of our common sense overseas and now our own supply is extinct? Oh, but don't worry I'm sure that we will be able to take our grandchildren to the National Green People's Museum and maybe show them an extinct sample of American common sense.


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