
Electronics make up 40% of a new car’s cost
Electronics make up 40 per cent of the cost of a new car, a new analysis suggests, with the figure set to rise over the next decade.
Automotive electronics – such as parking sensors, infotainment systems and anti-lock braking systems – accounted for as little as five per cent of a new car’s cost in 1970, as a result of the obvious lack of technology in cars at that time.
The figure reached 10 per cent in 1980 due to the advent of electronic fuel injection systems, and then hit 15 per cent in 1990. The research, from accountancy firm Deloitte, shows the proportion of the cost of a new car’s electronic systems was as high as 22 per cent in the year 2000, when airbags, anti-lock brakes and electronic stability programmes became increasingly standard.
In 2010, electronics accounted for 35 per cent of the cost of a new car, with advanced driver assistance and infotainment systems having been developed. Now, in 2020, the figure sits at around 40 per cent, and is only set to carry on climbing.
Deloitte projects that by 2030, electronics could make up between 45 and 50 per cent of a new car’s value, with the report’s authors predicting: “Consumption of automotive electronic components for safety, infotainment, navigation and fuel efficiency will increase for years to come due to ever-more electronic components being applied in advanced safety features added to vehicles.”
Check out these new cars due in 2020…
New Mercedes-AMG One hypercar will be built in Coventry
Production of the Mercedes-AMG One – Merc’s hugely complex F1 engine-powered car [..]
New 2022 Alfa Romeo Tonale SUV: UK prices and specs revealed
The new Alfa Romeo Tonale is now on sale in the UK, [..]
New Kia XCeed facelift gets £22,995 price tag
The Kia’s XCeed crossover has been facelifted for 2022 bringing a fresher [..]
‘Rodin and Moke are set to shake up the car industry’
Car company bosses come in all shapes and sizes. Elon Musk is [..]
Porsche Taycan sets new Nurburgring electric production car record
Porsche has won countless races around the Nurburgring in its history, and [..]
Sporty Hyundai Ioniq 5 N spotted testing
The Ioniq 5, our Car of the Year in 2021, is set [..]
All-electric Mercedes A-Class replacement could still be on
The A-Class was the fourth best-selling vehicle in Britain last year and [..]
New 2022 Porsche GT4 RS Spyder spotted again
Porsche’s track-honed GT4 RS is set to receive a drop-top Spyder variant [..]