AMSTERDAM: New car sales in the Netherlands increased by €1.3bn, or more than 11%, to €13bn last year, the sector organisation RAI Vereniging said on Friday. As reported earlier, 414,538 new cars were sold in 2017, an increase of 8.4% over the previous year. The RAI organisation said buoyant sales of smaller SUVs boosted the price average while a higher average new car tax increased the total price. Buyers have more confidence in the economy, RAI chairman Steven van Eijck commented. ‘After several years of overall economic growth, people are willing to spend more on a new car and this is reflected in the figures,’ he said. Private buyers spent an average of €29,596 in 2017, a 27% increase over the average €23,272 they paid 10 years earlier. However, the average price paid for a lease car fell back to €33,574 from the €34,569 paid in 2007. The RAI is worried about the higher BPM tax which, it says, is driving up the sales of parallel imports. This is ‘highly undesirable,’ Van Eijck said. Parallel imports reached a record 209,328 cars last year.
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