Exchange rate cripples vehicle importation, leading to a 60% drop in volume

Exchange rate cripples vehicle importation, leading to a 60% drop in volume

Recent reports have revealed that Nigeria’s vehicle importation has dropped significantly, with a staggering 60% decline in volume. This alarming decrease is largely attributed to the high exchange rates and Customs import duty on cargo clearance.

According to sources, vehicle imports plummeted from 45,000 between January and June 2023 to just 18,000 in the same period this year, indicating the severity of the situation.

Other factors contributing to this decline include high import duty and taxes for used vehicles, as well as the imposition of import levies on used vehicles. With the current exchange rate for cargo clearance at seaports standing at N1,512.21 per dollar, compared to the official rate of N1,509.67 at the NAFEM market trading segment, the cost of importing vehicles has become prohibitively expensive.

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Currently, the exchange rate for the clearance of imported cargoes at the seaports stands at N1,512.21 per dollar while the official exchange rate closes at N1,509.67 at the NAFEM, the market trading segment for investors, exporters and end-users that allows for FX trades to be made at exchange rates determined based on prevailing market circumstances.

Confirming the drop in vehicle importation, the general manager, Port and Terminal Multiservice Limited (PTML), Tunde Keshinro, also attributed it to the restriction of rebate on ex-factory prices used for assessment of import duty to 10 instead of 12 years.

Keshinro stated that the law allowed the importation of 12-year-old vehicles into the country but vehicle units above 10 years of age are currently forced to pay higher import duty.

PTML is a foremost roll-on-roll-off (RoRo) terminal in Nigeria, handling between 65 to 70 percent of vehicles imported into the country.

“For the period between January and June 2023, PTML terminal handled about 45,000 vehicle units while year 2024 of the same period saw a record reduction in volume of less than 18,000 units. If PTML handles 65-70 percent of Lagos port vehicle import traffic, you can project the figures with an additional 30 or 40 percent to have the idea of total imports of RoRo units into Lagos ports within the periods under review,” Keshinro stated.

He further noted that high exchange rates for importation and cargo clearance have taken imported used vehicles above the affordable level of the majority of Nigerians who depend on private vehicles for private and commercial transportation.

Managing director of Wealthy Honey Investment, a clearing and forwarding company, Dr Kayode Farinto, corroborated that vehicle importation into the country had dropped to about 55 percent, containers dropped to 30 percent while bulk cargo dropped to about 20 percent.

According to Farinto, in the last few months, there has been a significant drop in the volume of cargo in the country over the non-stability of the exchange rate.

“We have bulk cargo, containerised goods, and vehicles. The level of import of vehicles has dropped to about 55 percent, the level of import on containers has dropped to about 30 percent, and on bulk cargo, it is about 20 percent. So we are not really winning the war.

“The situation has not been very rosy for us in the industry, particularly the freight forwarders. We are not faring well. We have some people who have actually left the job, some remain thinking tomorrow will be a better day and we have some who have died. I can tell you that we lost a lot of members this year.

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