Toyota's China venture dismisses some factory workers as sales fall

    • The joint venture between Toyota and China’s state-owned Guangzhou Automobile Group (GAC) lays off the workers over the weekend and offers them compensation.
    • The joint venture between Toyota and China’s state-owned Guangzhou Automobile Group (GAC) lays off the workers over the weekend and offers them compensation. PHOTO: REUTERS
    Published Mon, Jul 24, 2023 · 07:55 PM

    TOYOTA Motor has dismissed some workers at one of its plants in China, three workers told Reuters, as the Japanese automaker struggles with a price war and sales slump in the world’s largest auto market.

    The joint venture between Toyota and China’s state-owned Guangzhou Automobile Group (GAC) laid off the workers over the weekend and offered them compensation, said the workers, who declined to be named for privacy.

    The workers affected were hired by labour service companies and dispatched to work at the factory of GAC Toyota in the southern city of Guangzhou.

    Reuters was unable to determine how many workers in total were dismissed. GAC and Toyota did not immediately respond to requests for comment on Monday (Jul 24).

    The GAC Toyota factory has an annual output capacity of 1 million vehicles and employs around 19,000 people, according to its website. It produces models including Camry, Levin and bZ4X.

    Toyota’s move comes after peer Mitsubishi said earlier in July it would cut staff costs at its Chinese joint venture with GAC to try to revive its fortunes.

    Japanese brands suffered the steepest sales slumps among automakers in China in the first half of this year, with their market share shrinking to 14.9 per cent from nearly 20 per cent a year ago, according to China Association of Automobile Association. Meanwhile, sales of Chinese brands accounted for 53 per cent of the total.

    Toyota has been counting on its electric vehicle (EV) models to revive sales in China, which fell 9 per cent in the first six months. The company joined a price war started by Tesla in January and slashed the starting price for its bZ4X EV by 15 per cent in February. REUTERS

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