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Toyota Beats Gm To End 2010 As World's Biggest Carmaker


Raistlin
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Toyota ended 2010 as the world's largest carmaker despite suffering a series of recalls and safety issues.

The Japanese company's sales reached 8.42 million vehicles, just beating General Motors' tally of 8.39 million.

Toyota's sales, including truckmaker Hino and carmaker Daihatsu, rose 8% from 2009 due to strong growth in China and other Asian countries.

Toyota dethroned its US rival as the world's biggest carmaker in 2008 - a position GM held for nearly 80 years.

But the company says it is targeting profits and quality rather than volume.

"Being number one in term of sales is not important for us," said Toyota spokesman Paul Nolasco.

"Our objective is to become number one with the customer, in terms of service and customer satisfaction."

The Japanese company, which had an impeccable reputation for quality, saw its image suffer in 2009, especially in America where it was the only major carmaker to see sales fall in 2010.

Toyota remains the leader, in spite of last year's embarrassing recalls.

But it may not last

General Motors is recovering quickly with strong sales growth, Volkswagen Group is also eyeing the top slot, and soon further consolidation in the motor industry could lead to the creation of new giants.

The main battles will be fought in Asia, where sales are set to grow the fastest in the years ahead.

Whoever wins in China and India will become the biggest in the world.

It recalled more than 10 million vehicles around the world for issues ranging from faulty floor mats to computer software faults.

Toyota's North American sales last year totalled 1.94 million vehicles, down 2% from 2009.

The company's sales in Japan rose 10% to 2.20 million vehicles, with the Prius its best-selling model.

Meanwhile, GM, which underwent a major restructuring in 2010 after going into bankruptcy protection and being bailed out by the US government, saw sales rise 12.2%, with a 28.8% jump in China. Sales in America rose 6.3%.

Although sales rose in the UK, there were setbacks in some other European markets, with Germany falling 29.5% and Italy down 10%.

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Only suffering a 2 percent drop in sales in America for 2010 is impressive considering all

the controversy with the recalls and related damage to reputation.

It would indeed be good for them to fucus on "serice and customer satisfaction, in fact

you could argue that Toyotas pre recall desire to be no 1 caused a lot of its problems.

But its good to see that lessons are being learned - and hopefully these lessons will

be reflected in the cars as time goes by.

Toyota though have being helped by the fact that opposition (such as Nissan) haven't

being doing all that great for reliability either with more recent cars. Particularly

with diesels.

Red diesel

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