2040 Forecast Shows Shifting Global Auto Market
Report estimates Western automakers have reached their peak on growth but should hold their own.

The report says global auto market growth could either be dominated by China by 2040 or be more even between it and the West.
Pexels/Alexsejs Bergmanis
The global new-vehicle sales picture puts sales in the West already at their peak or past it as those in China and the global South are expected to grow sharply, according to a new 2025 to 2040 forecast.
Munich, Germany-based management consultant Roland Berger expects China and global-South sales volume to hit about 60% of the world’s market by that time. Though it sees the combined Western markets of the U.S., Canada and Europe having reached their peak, it believes they’ll still hold a “crucial” market share.
Global new-vehicles sales will grow by an estimated 1% per year on average through the report period, compared to 2.4% from 2010 to 2019, the firm said.
“The global transformation that the automotive industry is going through is unstoppable and is only going to accelerate in the coming years,” said firm Partner Felix Mogge in a press release on its forecast. “The pace of change will be too fast for many companies. But the picture is not all bleak, because the disruption brings a great many new opportunities from which players that adopt smart strategies can profit.”
The Western markets will still post “absolute” growth of about $566 billion over the period, Roland Berger says.
The fully-electric vehicle segment of the market will represent about 70% of worldwide sales by 2040, estimates the report, which calls the shift “irreversible.” The U.S. market, it estimates, will be between 42% and 60% electric by then.
It will come as no surprise to anyone in the industry that vehicle automation and connection will also increase over the period, “with software overtaking hardware in importance.”
Ride-share services, though they will also grow, will do so more slowly than earlier forecasts predicted and have only a minor effect on vehicle sales, said the firm, which expects the growth to be concentrated in urban areas.
The report says global auto market growth could either be dominated by China by 2040 or be more even between it and the West.
DIG DEEPER: Cars Getting Gray on the Top
Originally posted on Auto Dealer Today
More Industry

Pennsylvania Dealership Under New Retailers
The sale of the Chrysler Dodge Jeep Ram store puts a family auto group on a leaner path as first-time dealers take the helm.
Read More →
Battery Storage Takes Priority Over EVs
U.S. automakers are prioritizing battery energy stationary storage over electric-vehicle production as the consumer demand for EVs lags the rest of the world.
Read More →
Auto Dealers Feel Better But Not Great
A second-quarter Cox Automotive poll of franchised retailers and independents found better views of the current market after a good spring but anticipation of third-quarter storminess.
Read More →
New-Vehicle Sales Picture Relative
A May forecast is complicated by last spring’s trade tariff effects on auto retail. Despite continued hard realities, many consumers took advantage of ways to bite the bullet.
Read More →
Auto Group Acquires Third Nissan Rooftop
Iowa-based Coleman Automotive Group recently acquired its seventh dealership, McGrath Nissan, which it renamed Nissan of Elgin.
Read More →
April Less Affordable
Based on prices, reduced incentives and slower household income growth, consumers found it more challenging to buy new last month, Cox Automotive reported.
Read More →
Building an Extraordinary F&I Agency
Work to determine your specialized talent, because that fact will determine everything about your agency’s future.
Read More →
Recipe for Compliance
The secret to both amazing barbecue and compliance is the same: understanding the basics and committing to a process.
Read More →
EVs Getting More Attractive
A growing percentage of U.S. consumers are open to switching and fewer are adverse to the idea, according to a recently completed survey. That’s despite the end of a tax break.
Read More →
EV Sales Drop in April Following Surge
North American electric-vehicle sales were down 28% year-over-year, a sharp contrast from global EV sales growth of 6%.
Read More →