Bajaj's remarks come against the backdrop of one of the most prolonged slowdowns plaguing India's automobile market, amid a slowing economy and dipping consumer confidence.
Union
Budget 2020 Expectation : The automobile industry is facing a
protracted slowdown because of “overregulation”, and the upcoming
Budget is unlikely to address its woes, Rajiv Bajaj, managing
director of Bajaj Auto, said on Tuesday.
“In
my view, the single most important reason responsible for the current
state of affairs the industry finds itself in is overregulation. It’s
overregulation that is killing the industry,” he said on the
sidelines of an event in Mumbai, where the company revealed the
prices of the e-Chetak.
Bookings
for the company’s maiden offer in the electric segment, with prices
starting from Rs 1 lakh, will open on Wednesday and deliveries will
commence by the end of February from select KTM outlets in Bengaluru
and Pune.
Bajaj
had unveiled the scooter on October 16 in Delhi. The Chetak can run
up to 95 km on a single charge when ridden in economy mode. A slew of
regulations on safety, insurance, and emissions over the past one and
a half years have made two wheelers (150cc and above in the mass
segment) dearer by almost 30 per cent, hurting demand.
Bajaj’s
remarks come against the backdrop of one of the most prolonged
slowdowns plaguing India’s automobile market, amid a slowing
economy and dipping consumer confidence. Passenger vehicle sales have
been on a decline for the past six quarters, while two-wheeler sales
have been skidding for four quarters. Sales of motorcycles and
scooters fell 15 per cent in the December quarter.
“What
purpose is served by making insurance mandatory for everyone? As if
people can’t think for themselves. The government has to think on
our behalf. We can’t make simple choices,” said Bajaj, alluding
to the insurance regulator’s diktat in September 2018, which
mandated an upfront payment of premium for five years for third-party
liability.
Bajaj
also questioned the need to make ABS (anti-lock braking system), a
safety feature, mandatory for two-wheelers.
According
to him, given the state of India’s roads and traffic congestion
where one struggles to go beyond 20 kmph, imposing the ABS (on bikes
that are 150cc and above), which increased prices by Rs 8000-10,000,
made little sense.
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