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Japanese auto production marks its worst drop in at least 40 years

Associated Press

TOKYO — Japan's production of cars, trucks and buses marked its steepest drop in at least four decades in November, an industry group said Thursday, as the fallout from the U.S. slowdown crimped auto demand.

Vehicle production in Japan, home to Toyota Motor Corp. and other major automakers, plunged 20.4 per cent in November compared to the same month a year ago to 854,171 vehicles, the Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association said.

That marked the second straight month of on-year declines and the percentage slide was the biggest since the group began compiling such data in 1967, it said.

Production of passenger cars decreased 20.3 per cent in November from the previous year to 737,797 vehicles, while production of trucks here declined 20.9 per cent for the month to 106,170.

Japanese automakers, which also include Honda Motor Co., Nissan Motor Co. and several other manufacturers, have been hammered by the dwindling of demand in the United States, the world's biggest auto market.

But signs are growing the fallout is so serious domestic sales are getting drastically damaged as well.

Auto executives have expressed dismay at the fall in Japanese sales.

Japanese plants are being idled to reduce production, and thousands of assembly line workers have lost their jobs in recent weeks.

“Even if we are doing our utmost, the global crisis is coming at us like a tidal wave,” Teruyuki Minoura, president of Daihatsu Motor Co., a Toyota affiliate, told reporters Thursday.

Earlier this month, the automobile association said it expected demand in Japan will dive next year to its lowest in about three decades.

Sales of new autos are expected to stand at 4.86 million in 2009, down 4.9 per cent from what it's projecting for this year at 5.11 million, the group said.

New vehicle sales in Japan have never dipped below the five million mark since 1980. They reached 7.78 million in 1990, during this heyday “bubble” economy.

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