Skip advert
Advertisement
Opinion

JLR is moving in the opposite direction to VW-Audi and Hyundai-Kia, and that’s not a good thing

Instead of following the successful business model adopted by VW-Audi, Toyota-Lexus and Hyundai-Kia, Mike Rutherford thinks JLR is moving in the opposite direction

Opinion - JLR

UK car-manufacturing numbers fell through the floor in the last month or so. In June, the 27-per cent plunge (vs June ’23) was debilitating and, frankly, unsustainable for the British automotive business. 

But the disappointing numbers are explained away by the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders. All this was “expected” and “caused by multiple model changes” as “factories repurpose,” it stated. Also, don’t forget: “Manufacturers are retooling production lines to make electrified models.”  

Fair enough. But everything from model changes to retooling and repurposing in the short term aren’t the major, long-term problems. Bigger dilemmas by far go like this: we have to accept and deal with the fact that the usual suspects – Japan, Germany, South Korea, Spain, USA and France, in that order – already build more cars than us and will almost certainly continue to do so. But more importantly, the huge, comparatively new kids on the block – China in particular, but India too – are also giving us a comprehensive kicking on the car-production front. As are Brazil, the Czech Republic, Indonesia and Slovakia. And the unlikeliest of suspects – Iran and Turkey – are beating Blighty, too.     

Advertisement - Article continues below

Putting China and India aside, I consider Germany, Japan and South Korea among the most respected, successful, established and tried and tested car producers. The priority for their domestic makers is mass production of non-premium and premium cars. Why? Because that’s where hundreds of thousands of jobs, tens of millions of sales, and billions of profits come from. 

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

Much, much further down their priority list is making and selling a tiny handful of luxury cars. Why? Because very few of the public can afford such models. True, the high profit margins might be tempting. But as Volkswagen-Audi, Toyota-Lexus and Hyundai-Kia show, it makes far more sense to produce millions of cars that rake in small to medium profits per unit than it does to build a few thousand luxury models that are highly profitable.   

But instead of following the consistently successful business model adopted by these world-beating duos, the closest thing Britain has to a home-grown pair (Jaguar Land Rover) is moving in the opposite direction. Currently, it’s a small outfit on the global stage. A realistic aim would be to crank up production and become medium-sized. Far more ambitious and considerably harder to establish would be to win entry into the sort of ‘large and loud’ territory that the Seoul brothers – Hyundai-Kia – have somehow managed to occupy. But if they can do it, why can’t the Jag-Land Rover sister act?

Instead, the separate but connected Jaguar and Range Rover brands are going further and further down the luxury-car route. Inevitably, this means JLR will build fewer cars, which in turn means that Britain will sink even further down the table of car-producing nations. Last year, we produced around half as many cars as half a decade earlier. By the end of 2024, and despite the alleged ramping up of electric car production, I estimate that annual output here will be lower than in 2023. And we know one of the main reasons, don’t we? 

Do you agree with Mike? Let us know your thoughts in the comments section...

Skip advert
Advertisement
Chief columnist

Mike was one of the founding fathers of Auto Express in 1988. He's been motoring editor on four tabloid newspapers - London Evening News, The Sun, News of the World & Daily Mirror. He was also a weekly columnist on the Daily Telegraph, The Independent and The Sunday Times. 

Skip advert
Advertisement

Recommended

New Jaguar GT prototype review: controversial EV is more Bentley than Porsche
Jaguar GT prototype - front

New Jaguar GT prototype review: controversial EV is more Bentley than Porsche

We hit the ice and snow to try out the new Jaguar GT and it's already showing plenty of potential
Road tests
2 Feb 2026
Chery confirms new Liverpool HQ as plans for Jaguar Land Rover to build Chinese firm’s cars in UK gather pace
New Chery Tiggo 9 2025 UK review - head on

Chery confirms new Liverpool HQ as plans for Jaguar Land Rover to build Chinese firm’s cars in UK gather pace

A deal between the British and Chinese brands could see Chery models built using spare JLR capacity
News
30 Jan 2026
Jaguar GT lease-only rumours quashed: customers to get a “range of purchase options” later this year
Jaguar GT 2025 - front

Jaguar GT lease-only rumours quashed: customers to get a “range of purchase options” later this year

Rumours that the new Jag would be lease-only have been quashed, with the maker insisting customers will be able to buy or lease one as they wish
News
19 Jan 2026
Best new cars coming soon: all the big new car launches due in 2026, 2027 and beyond
Best new cars coming soon - header image

Best new cars coming soon: all the big new car launches due in 2026, 2027 and beyond

Here are the most important new cars from Audi, BMW, Dacia, Ferrari, Ford, Skoda and more that you need to know about
Best cars & vans
2 Jan 2026

Most Popular

Some Chinese car brands are doomed to disappear, warns Skoda boss
Skoda Kodiaq - front cornering

Some Chinese car brands are doomed to disappear, warns Skoda boss

Skoda’s sales and marketing boss warns “there will be a consolidation” of the number of Chinese car brands around
News
3 Feb 2026
New Kia EV1 electric city car on the way to rival the Renault Twingo
Kia EV1 - front (watermarked)

New Kia EV1 electric city car on the way to rival the Renault Twingo

Kia's design boss lifts the lid on plans for a Renault Twingo and Volkswagen ID. Lupo rival, and our exclusive images preview how the EV1 could look
News
2 Feb 2026
Meet Renault’s new SUV: a Dacia Duster but not as we know it…
Renault Duster - front

Meet Renault’s new SUV: a Dacia Duster but not as we know it…

Posher inside and out and with more headroom, welcome to the upside down world of the Indian Duster
News
26 Jan 2026

Find a car with the experts