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China carmaker SAIC-GM-Wuling Automobile, manufacturer of the country's bestselling electric vehicle (EV), will launch a new minivan with nine-seats to echo the country’s new Three Child Policy, becoming the first known company hopping on board with Beijing's new population policy. Photo: Weibo

Three-child policy: GM’s China venture Wuling gets ahead of likely baby boom with nine-seat vans to cater for bigger families

  • SAIC-GM-Wuling Automobile hopes to tap future demand from larger families under the country’s new three-child policy
  • Unlike its bestselling Hongguang Mini EV, however, the new van will be powered by a traditional petrol engine
SAIC-GM-Wuling Automobile, the manufacturer of China’s bestselling electric vehicle (EV), is to launch a new minivan, hoping to tap future demand from larger families under the country’s new three-child policy.

“SAIC-GM-Wuling Automobile heeds the government’s recent call for allowing couples to have three children, and will roll out a brand new nine-seat car to cater to the demands of big families with more people, with multiple uses for different occasions,” said the home-grown car maker on its official WeChat account late on Thursday. “Wuling will make whatever is in public demand.”

The carmaker appears to be the first manufacturer to respond directly to Beijing’s new ruling on births by offering a new product. Unlike its bestselling Hongguang Mini EV, however, the new van will be powered by an internal combustion engines that runs on petrol.

The joint venture between state-run car giant SAIC, General Motors, and Liuzhou Wuling Motors in China’s southwestern Guangxi autonomous region, said that the nine seats will be arranged in four rows, with two seats in each of the front three rows and three in the back.

“We started to study the new design last year and we will put the new model into mass production and deliver the vehicles to the market this year,” said Zhou Xing, marketing director at SAIC-GM-Wuling. He said the price and other features such as size, range and engine power will be announced later.

The company’s move comes after a meeting of the Politburo of the Communist Party chaired by President Xi Jinping led to the announcement on Monday that couples would be permitted to have three children from now on. China scrapped its one-child policy, enforced for more than 35 years, in 2015 amid a historically low birth rate.

Families were given the go-ahead to have two children, but apart from an initial spike the following year, the birth rate has continued to fall. Last year, China recorded 12 million births, its lowest level in 60 years, according to a once-in-a-decade census released last month.

China carmaker SAIC-GM-Wuling Automobile, manufacturer of the country's bestselling electric vehicle (EV), will launch a new minivan with nine seats across four rows to echo the country’s new Three Child Policy, becoming the first known company hopping on board with Beijing's new population policy. Photo: Weibo

“SAIC-GM-Wuling is nimble in adjusting its production line to manufacture new vehicles to adapt to changing demands from consumers,” said Peter Chen, an engineer with the car component company ZF TRW in Shanghai. “The van is just the latest example of its manufacturing capability.”

It is not the first time the company has conjured up a new product in response to central government policy changes.

In mid-2020, it churned out a minivan priced at 56,800 yuan (US$8,870), aimed at being the perfect tool for vendors running a street stall.

It came after Premier Li Keqiang described small businesses as the driving force behind China’s economy and pledged to provide more support for market stalls and small businesses as they are an important source of jobs.

The vehicle was designed to help tiny retailers set themselves up as street vendors under Beijing’s directions.

And in March last year, when the mainland faced a severe shortage of face masks amid the Covid-19 pandemic, SAIC-GM-Wuling installed production facilities that had a daily capacity of 1.7 million masks.

Last August, SAIC-GM-Wuling launched the Hongguang Mini EV with a driving range of 170km.

The electric car, priced from 28,800 yuan (US$4,497) became the mainland’s bestselling battery-powered vehicle as soon as it hit the market, with monthly sales of more than 30,000 units.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: carmaker takes new route after shake-up with 9-seat minivan
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