Credit: Paul Jones "Toyota Australia today announced that it will stop building cars in Australia by the end of 2017 and become a national sales and distribution company," the company said in a media statement. "This means that local manufacturing of the Camry, Camry Hybrid and Aurion vehicles, as well as the production of four-cylinder engines, will cease by the end of 2017. "The decision was not based on any single factor. The market and economic factors contributing to the decision include the unfavourable Australian dollar that makes exports unviable, high costs of manufacturing and low economies of scale for our vehicle production and local supplier base," the statement said. "Together with one of the most open and fragmented automotive markets in the world and increased competitiveness due to current and future free trade agreements, it is not viable to continue building cars in Australia."

Toyota Australia chief Mr Yasuda said the company had done everything it could to transform its business. “But the reality is that there are too many factors beyond our control that make it unviable to build cars in Australia,” he said Industry Minister Ian MacFarlane said the federal government was in discussions to provide further assistance to Toyota, but those discussiona ''have been curtailed by the decision the company made today''.



Mr MacFarlane also said that ''hundreds of thousands of workers are made redundant every year'', and the Australian economy was able to provide jobs and other options for those people. Prime Minister Tony Abbott also took a hard line on Toyota’s decision to close local manufacturing. ''While some businesses close, other businesses open, while some jobs end, other jobs start,'’ he said. ‘’The challenge of government at all levels is to ensure there are more jobs starting than ending.



‘Nothing we can say or do can limit the impact and devastation today that some people feel .. . [but] there will be better days in the future.’’ Federal Opposition Leader Bill Shorten laid the blame for Toyota's demise at the feet of the Abbott government.



‘‘It's an unmitigated disaster,’’ he said. ‘‘The car industry has died under the Abbott government. It's a disgrace.’’

‘‘Tony Abbott does not give a stuff about jobs in Australia, he is just busy playing political games and stunts.’’



Mr Shorten said Toyota executives had told him their decision to quit Australia had nothing to do with overly generous workers’ conditions.



He put Toyota’s exit down to a combination of the high Australian dollar, the small size of the local market, the collapse of Holden and the pressure that put on component manufacturers. Victorian Premier Denis Napthine said he was told of the decision by the president of Toyota Corporation, Akio Toyoda, that the company would cease production in Australia.



''I am extremely disappointed by this sudden decision and would clearly have preferred to have had the opportunity to work through these issues with Toyota and the federal government,'' he said.



''My thoughts go immediately to Toyota workers and their families as well as workers across the supply chain. The Victorian Coalition government stands ready to do everything we can to support workers and their families.'' Labor industry spokesman Kim Carr was furious with the decision.



''Tony Abbott has effectively chased them out of Australia,'' Mr Carr said. ‘‘This is a government that prides itself on its capacity to destroy industries. 2013 was a referendum on the future of the automotive industry. I am truly appalled. The social and economic implications of this decision for Australian manufacturing are disastrous.



‘‘None of this was necessary, this was never inevitable. What is the alternative for the 30,000 auto workers in Victoria?''



Mr Carr said the Labor government had budgeted $200 million to help Toyota build the next-generation Camry in Australia beyond 2017.



''This government has a viciousness to it, a callous disregard for the social consequences,'' he said.



''Toyota made it very clear that they need a long-term consistent globally competitive policy suitable to attract future investment.'' Unions laid the blame for the announcement on Prime Minister Tony Abbott, saying the closure came as a result of the Coalition ‘‘refusing to support investment in Australia’’. And one union official predicted the departure of Toyota could throw Australia’s eastern states into recession. Australian Manufacturing Workers Union vehicle division secretary Dave Smith said the closure in 2017 would be devastating for thousands of workers and the entire Australian manufacturing industry.



‘‘This decision will see thousands of jobs exit Australia – not only at Toyota directly but all the way down the supply chain,’’ Mr Smith said. ‘‘The magnitude of this decision in the community cannot be underestimated. We are looking at a potential recession all along the south-eastern seaboard.’’



Mr Smith said the government was ‘‘chasing important and viable operations out of Australia. This is serious injections of foreign capital we are waving goodbye to across the manufacturing sector.’’

He said there was not a a car industry in the world that did not receive government support.



“If you value something, you invest in it. This government is driving jobs and our economy into the ground.”

Last month Industry Minister Ian McFarlane estimated that 30,000 jobs could be gone from the industry in less than three years if Toyota quit the country. Loading In May last year Ford announced it would cease production in Australia, with an estimated 1200 Victorian workers to lose their jobs in October 2016.



Then, in December, General Motors Holden announced it would also end local manufacturing, a move that would force 2900 staff out of jobs, including 1300 in Victoria.



A review of the parts industry, by Allens Consulting Group for the Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries found that local car makers spend $2.25 billion a year with suppliers in Victoria and $600 million in South Australia.



Toyota’s future has been in doubt following a Productivity Commission recommendation that the federal government end all subsidies of the car industry.



Toyota had consistently stated it needed to cut labour costs as part of an overall move to reduce production costs per car by $3800 by 2018 and keep the car maker in Australia.



More to come