How much do we care where our cars come from? Not specifically you and me, I mean; you're reading a British car website, and there's a strong chance you're invested, at least emotionally, if not professionally, in the car business.
But what of 'the man on the Clapham omnibus', the legal profession's hypothetical ordinary, reasonable person on the street, someone uninvested, just going about their business? Do they care?
Certainly they’ll know about it much more readily than they know where, say, their plastic buckets, clothing, processed food or the hypothetical bus in which they're travelling comes from, because the busyness, or otherwise, of their local factories will be big news.
'UK car making plunges to lowest for over 70 years', ran a BBC headline earlier this summer (partly, but far from exclusively, because US trade tariffs made JLR press pause on sending cars to America). But it's not just a British worry.
”There are concerns in Germany, Italy, France and Japan," Prof Peter Wells of Cardiff University's Centre for Automotive Industry Research told the BBC at the time. "It's not purely a UK phenomenon." Traditional car-building countries are struggling to make as many cars as they used to. And you'll know as well as I do what some of the causes of this phenomenon are.
Chinese cars were, not very long ago, something of a novelty and, if we're honest, not a terribly competitive one. With what now looks like naivety, the European car industry seemed to assume things would stay that way.



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On a recent podcast, you and Cropley concluded it didn't matter where people bought their cars from. You had a chance to encourage the UK industry but declined it.
Sadly, many Brits think patriotism is about flag waving and shouting at foreigners, rather than doing anything that actually benefits the country as a whole.
These are desperate times.
Over the years i have bought cars from all over the world, Australian, American, Italian, japanese, French, and even English a long time ago. Its always been about the car, not the country that made them. I suspect if China starts making RWD manual V8 coupes, i might even buy a Chinese car. The problem these days is still not where a car is made, just that no one sells appealing (and affordable) cars in the UK any longer