Daimler to invest $1.1bn in it’s second Hungarian plant
Published at: 29/07/2016 11:13 pm
Daimler AG said it would build a new factory in Hungary to make Mercedes-Benz cars, giving a major boost to the local economy and raising the competitive pressure on the luxury automaker's established plants in Germany. Daimler will spend €1 billion ($1.12 billion) by 2020 to expand its site at Kecskemet, central Hungary, where it will add 2,500 jobs, it said in a statement.
The new factory will be the first plant capable of producing both compact cars and larger limousines, Mercedes-Benz said, adding flexibility to the carmaker's production network, which has depended mainly on Germany and China to produce limousines. Mercedes-Benz is running its factories at full capacity and struggling to expand its existing production sites in Germany after a strategy shift to give cars a more upmarket appeal gained traction with customers. Hungary, which relies on the auto industry for a third of its industrial output, is likely to see a 3 per cent export boost and a 0.4 per cent increase in economic output once the factory is at full capacity, Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto said. Szijjarto told a press conference the new plant would almost double the capacity of the current site to 330,000 vehicles compared with the 180,000 manufactured last year. Mercedes-Benz made 1.87 million cars in 2015.New investments, including the Hungarian Residency Program can further strengthen the stable growth of the Hungarian economy.
Szijjarto put Daimler's decision to expand in Hungary partly down to the country's economic policy, adding the government had also offered incentives worth 12.9 billion forints. Other carmakers in Hungary include Mercedes-Benz rival Audi (NSUG.DE), which has invested more than €8 billion ($8.94 billion) since 1993, Japan's Suzuki and General Motors.So far, Mercedes-Benz has had production lines making either rear-wheel drive models such as the E-Class or C-Class or front-wheel drive models, like the A-Class, B-Class or CLA. Kecskemet has only built smaller vehicles. A Mercedes-Benz spokesman said it was too early to say which rear-wheel drive models would be built at the new factory. (Photo: nikshor / Shutterstock.com)
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