Australians Don't Want American Cars Either

It's not just Europe that isn't interested. In 2017 we bought more new examples of a car that died in 2016 than we bought Chrysler 300s

You might remember a few months back Donald Trump complained that Europeans don't buy enough American cars. A couple of weeks ago, in the midst of trade war talks, an op-ed was published by Top Gear outlining why Europeans don't buy American cars. Us Aussies don't want them either. Our tastes are actually very different

There aren’t a great deal of American cars sold in Australia, and no manufacturer relies entirely on them. Ford, Holden, Fiat-Chrysler, Toyota and Nissan all have US-built models in their respective line-ups. Among the top 10 new vehicles sold in Australia last year, not one was American. The Ford Mustang was the only American car to lead it’s segment, with 9165 sold, well ahead of the second-placed Toyota 86 with 1935 sales. The highest selling American-built vehicle in Australia was the Toyota Kluger (Highlander). 12,509 units were shifted, placing it second in the large SUV segment, behind the Toyota LandCruiser Prado. Most people wouldn’t even be aware that the Kluger is built in Indiana. No other American car featured anywhere near the top of their respective segments. Even the Chrysler 300 couldn’t make the top five in large cars under $70k, a segment with limited competition. It was even beaten by the Ford Falcon, despite no Falcons being built in 2017. They couldn't even sell the 300 SRT to the Police as a highway patrol car in absence of the Commodore SS and Falcon XR6 Turbo. The BMW 530d got the job instead. Holden recently released the Equinox in Australia. Until the Acadia arrives later this year, it’s the only US-sourced model in Holden’s range. If early reviews are anything to go by, it doesn’t hold a candle to the likes of the Mazda CX-5, and won’t be much of a success.

Many of the quintessential American cars, and especially American pickups, are simply too big for our roads. The ones that aren't, like the Ford Focus and Toyota Camry aren't really American at all. The only thing American about the former is the badge. Our parking spaces and driveways are designed around two different passenger car turning templates, B85 and B99. The B85 has dimensions that make it less manoeuvrable than 85 percent of the cars on Australian roads. It's more or less an amalgam of Falcon and Commodore. The B99 is roughly the size of an S Class or Holden Caprice. Broadly speaking our infrastructure wasn't designed to accommodate massive American pickups and SUVs. Ford offered F250 and F350 in Australia for a short period but sales were too low to justify offering the second generation Super Duty in right hand drive. Holden sold the gargantuan Suburban in the late 1990s but hardly anyone bought them. These days Walkinshaw holds the exclusive Australian import and RHD conversion rights to both the Chevrolet Silverado and Ram Trucks. They sell them for over $100k each to the handful of people who actually need them.

Other American cars struggle to be taken seriously. The Chrysler 300 is a decent car, but has been outsold by everything you could consider a direct rival. Its bold styling is off-putting in what is one of the most conservative market segments in Australia and there’s nothing it does better than a Holden Calais or Caprice for the same price. Maybe with the Caprice gone the 300 can attract more buyers. Over it's 13 year tenure, the 300 has been a success when compared to the Hummer H3. Holden imported right hand drive H3s from the US between 2006 and 2009, but sold less than 2000 of them. This is partly because it was objectively terrible, but also partly because it was seen as a joke. 4WD enthusiasts are fiercely brand-loyal, so Holden was always going to have a hard time tempting buyers out of established models like the Nissan Pathfinder, Mitsubishi Pajero and Toyota Prado. It didn’t help that the H3 lacked a diesel engine and had a towing capacity lower than any SUV you could name, never mind any other 4WD. It was viewed as a poser’s car. It wasn’t the real thing, nor was it civilised enough for SUV buyers. It was basically a rebodied Rodeo with an extra half a tonne of mass and tiny windows and drove accordingly.

Jeeps tend to come in and out of fashion. They have a habit of releasing models that are popular early on, but don’t hold their showroom appeal once the novelty wears off, something better comes along or reliability concerns arise. In the early 2000s, they became very popular. When the Ford Territory arrived, Jeep Cherokee (and Ford Explorer) sales, already below those of the Mitsubishi Pajero, dropped off. When the massively improved current model Grand Cherokee was released, people started buying Jeeps again. Then Jeep, along with every other FCA product, quickly earned a reputation for building lemons.

Even when the Americans are selling more conventional cars, they tend to flop in Australia. Poor build quality is largely to blame. Until recently the lack of diesel engine options in 4WDs didn't help either. The Chrysler Neon and Sebring, every Dodge, and every pre-2011 Jeep has been burdened by interior plastics far worse than the competition. The Holden Malibu was a much better car than it’s Chrysler compatriots, but still relied on low prices and sold in meagre volumes. Even when they got the perceived quality sorted out, FCA models were still plagued by recalls. Making matters, worse, a lemon Jeep Cherokee was destroyed by it’s owner in a video that went viral.

Poor quality isn't the only issue. Americans seem to have fundamentally different tastes to Australians. Well made, Japanese and Korean cars pitched at the American market have failed to make an impact on Australia. The Honda Accord, Nissan Maxima, Murano and Altima, Hyundai i45 and Lexus ES are a few examples. Most Australians aren’t interested in soft suspension, chrome grilles, grey interiors and fake wood. Cars that hardly figure in the US, like the Mazda 6, Volkswagen Passat and Subaru Liberty (Legacy), do much better in Australia. Despite having less than 10 percent of the population, we buy more Mazdas than America does. The Toyota Camry is the biggest selling midsize sedan both here and in the US, but don’t expect it to stay that way. Camry sales in Australia were propped up by fleets, buying them at heavily discounted prices offered by Toyota in a desperate attempt to keep to keep the Melbourne factory open. The 2018 model costs just as much as it’s rivals, so is unlikely to enjoy the sales dominance of its predecessors.

If American car makers want to sell cars in Australia, they need to make them smaller and sportier, with better perceived quality, less chrome and more understated, better proportioned styling. Consider this. The Holden sourced Pontiac GTO and G8, and the Chevy SS looked boring to American tastes, but they were well received in Australia. The Yank-focussed Mitsubishi ASX (why they named a car after the Australian Securities Exchange is beyond me) and Outlander are… outlandish to Australian eyes. The American cars that would actually appeal to Australians (Mustang excepted) are the Chevrolet Camaro and Corvette, Dodge Challenger, and Cadillac ATS and CTS. Cadillac would have a hard time competing directly with the Germans, however. Jaguar-Land Rover, Lexus, Alfa Romeo and Maserati have had a hard time competing with BMW, Mercedes and Audi. You’ll rarely spot an Infiniti in Australia. It's hard to see Cadillac doing any better.

If American car manufacturers can’t succeed in Australia, what hope do they have for Europe? Instead of blaming Europe for not buying American cars, Trump should point the finger at GM and Chrysler for not making cars the rest of the world wants to buy.

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Comments (5)

  • The BMW X5 sells well as do the Merc SUVs & they're built in the US. Funnily enough a lot of our Jeeps are built in Europe though.

      3 years ago
  • "Too big for the roads"....Lol. That's cute. Hi...have you met Australia? Have fun with that. Meanwhile....I'll take one Dodge Hellcat, and a Toyota Tundra. Thank you very much.

      1 year ago
  • I couldn't agree more. America should've at least kept Australian designers on the payrole so they could design the cars, and then leave the manufacturing to Germans, Koreans or whoever the hell builds them now. Its why no one will buy the new Commodore, its too American looking, despite being designed by Germans. Also because people want hatches now (why not a smaller version of the Torana or a new gemini?). The overhang needs to be closer to the ground, the grill more VF like and large glossed headlights would make it look more decent at the front. At the back, a boot like a Commodores, no chrome fascia bits, small tail lights and a small boot spoiler would look better. RWD and a manual option would help too. Other than that the new Commodore is actually alright but the way its sales are going, Holden will most likely be gone or close to gone in the next 5 years.

      3 years ago
  • Agreed to large and only work in their country. Although when they brought cars over to the UK that worked they weren't as good as they looked especially inside them

      3 years ago
    • What a load of garbage. My daily driver is a RAM 1500 and I see plenty of other 1500's and 3500's.

        1 year ago
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