Vehicle users not changing worn out tyres due to high cost


Some dealers in vehicle tyres and vulcanisers have expressed worry about high import duties on new tyres.

According to them, the high import duties have made it impossible for them to acquire materials for their work.

‘Rim 14 car tyre’ increased from GH? 70 to GH? 150
The dealers in the tyre industry indicated that the rim 14 car tyre’ which was sold between GH? 60 and GH? 70 last year is now going for GH? 150 due to exorbitant duties on materials.

Sales reduced drastically
Speaking to our reporter, they said this had made things very difficult for them as sales have reduced drastically over the period.
Ibrahim Abdul Rahman of Bashiru Tyres termed the high taxation of imported tyres as an impediment to growth while noting that some relief in terms of duties could help to increase sales.
He noted that working as an employee, he barely gets GH? 10 in a day due to low patronage.
Despite low sales, he said they do not get support from any governmental agency to aid their activities smoothly.  
Ibrahim Rahman said that even though there were shortages in the various types of tyres in the country, the motivation to go for more has subsided because of the duty charges on items.
“There is a shortage but due to high-priced duty charges, we fear to even bring tyres. We are pleading that these duties should be reduced so we can have safe vehicles in our environment,” he pleaded.
Low sales
He added that in recent times, they only made sales between the ranges of GH? 250 and GH ?300 out of which the cost of the tyre will be taken from and workers will be paid.

Car owners struggling to replace worn out tyres
Rahman also indicated that as a vulcaniser, people come with spoilt tyres but because the prices are high they cannot afford to change them.
He said the cost of materials for the vulcanising job has also increased as the vulcanizing machine sold between GH? 1,200 and GH? 1,500 last year had increased to GH? 6,000.
He noted that sales could be as low as GH? 10 per day making it difficult to operate effectively.
“There is no monthly pay in what we do so when will we gather the GH? 2 and GH? 5 that comes from the pumping of the tyre to take care of our families and feed ourselves.
“Most of our friends have left the job. Before we were about 15 workers and we use to accumulate adequate money for ourselves and our family by the close of the day. But now everyone has left, we are only five remaining. Times are hard,” he lamented

Cost of industrial tyres increased by GH? 2,000
The Chairman of the Abossey Okai roundabout tyre dealers association, Emmanuel Danquah, also indicated that industrial tyres that were sold at GH? 2,000 last year are now going for GH? 4,000 due to import duties.

Tyre for Sprinter buses increase from GH? 180 last year to GH? 350
He lamented that the Sprinter car tyre which was going for GH? 180 last year was now GH? 350; making customers complain as though they have increased the prices for their benefit.

Tyre sold for GH? 100 last year is now GH? 200
“A tyre sold for GH? 100 is now GH? 200 due to import duty. The business is slow. How can things increase that much within a year?” he questioned.
Mr Danquah called on government to reduce import duties adding that “we don’t see the work they use the tax for. We’ve been paying import duties for over 20 years but we don’t benefit from whatever they use it for”.

Idleness at work
“We sit idle a lot when we come to work these days because there are no jobs. People neither pump tyres nor buy new tyres. Drivers come here with totally spoilt tyres but they don’t have money to purchase new ones, so they wait until the tyre burst.”
This according to Mutalib Hudu, a vulcaniser and tyre dealer, makes vehicle owners buy used tyres instead of brand new ones.
He said on the average the cost of a new tyre is six times the used tyre and for that reason people who cannot afford the new ones buy old ones which also affect them in the long run.
He noted that in the past year, they used to sell between 10 and 12 tyres in a week because people had the money to afford them.
However, he said currently they suffer before selling at most two car tyres in a week.
“Same applies to the pumping of tyres also. Previously, we had many people coming in to check their tyres and pump for safety reasons but now that aspect is also very slow. Charges have also increased making patronage very low,” he said.
He explained that the car tyre that was pumped at GH? 1 is now GH? 2 and the fixing of new tyres which was done at a cost of GH? 5 is now GH? 10.
Mutalib Hudu said the GH? 150 sales he made per day last year had reduced to GH? 50 in recent times.
Another tyre dealer, Issaka Musah, cried out for a reduction in import duties.

Duty on 40-footer container went up from GH? 90, 000 to GH? 120, 000
He explained that the duty of a 40-footer container of tyres which was GH? 90, 000 is now GH? 120, 000.
Due to this, he noted that prices of the items become very expensive because they needed to add the cost of import duty to make a profit.
“The tyres are not here and they are not made in Ghana. We import many things so when it gets here we plead that the duty should be reduced so we can also sell at a moderate price,” he said.

By Christabel Oboshie ANNAN, Accra

ABOUT: Nana Kwesi Coomson

[email protected]

An Entrepreneur, Corporate Social Responsibility, Corporate Communications Executive and Philanthropist. Editor-in-Chief of www.233times.com. A Senior Journalist with Ghanaian Chronicle Newspaper. An alumnus of Adisadel College where he read General Arts. His first degree is in Bachelor of Arts - Political Science (major) and History (minor) from the University of Ghana. He holds MSc in Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) and Energy with Public Relations (PR) from the Robert Gordon University in the United Kingdom. He is a 2018 Mandela Washington Fellow who studied at Clark Atlanta University in USA on the Business and Entrepreneurship track.

View all posts by: Nana Kwesi Coomson  

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