|
|
Glossary
Auto Loan terminology can sometimes be confusing. Here are a few common
terms and their meanings.
- Aftermarket
(Replacement Market)
- all products and services used in the
repair and maintenance of vehicles.
- Aftermarket
part
- goods not for use as original equipment
in the production of light-duty vehicles or heavy-duty vehicles, ie.
products and services used in the repair and maintenance of these
vehicles.
- Agent or
broker
- an intermediary with legal authority to
operate on behalf of the manufacturer.
- American
Automobile Labelling Act (AALA)
- regulations requiring vehicle
manufacturers to include content information on vehicle labels for cars
and trucks for sale in the U.S. after October 1, 1994.
- Anti-lock
braking system (ABS)
- System that automatically controls
wheel slip or prevents sustained wheel-locking on braking.
- Asia Pacific
Economic Cooperation (APEC)
- An organization established in 1989 to
promote trade and investment in the Pacific Basin. APEC now comprises
eighteen countries located in and around the Pacific Ocean: Australia,
Brunei, Canada, Chile, China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia,
Mexico, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, the Phillippines, Sinapore, South
Korea, Taiwan, Thailand, and the United States.
- Association
of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN)
- an organization of states (including
Brunei, Myanmar, Burma, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, the Philippines,
Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam) founded in 1967 to present an united
front that addresses the political, economic, and strategic dynamics of
the region.
- Auto Pact
base year
- With respect to the Auto Pact, the 12
month period beginning on August 1, 1963, and ending on July 31, 1964.
- Auto Pact
Canadian value added
- the aggregate of the costs of parts,
material, labour costs, and transportation costs that are reasonably
attributed to the production of vehicles or parts by manufacturers
producing vehicles in Canada.
- Automated
Guided Vehicle System (AGVS)
- vehicles equipped with automatic
guidance equipment which follow a prescribed path, stopping at each
machining or assembly station for manual loading and unloading of parts.
-
Autodealership or auto dealer
- a retail outlet that carries one (or in
some cases in the U.S., a number of) manufacturer's product line and
sells to general consumers and fleet operators. The outlet will also
provide service and sell parts for the brand of vehicle that it carries.
In some instances, a dealer may dual for another manufacturer's product
line.
- Automobile
- four-wheeled passenger motor vehicle
having a seating capacity for not more than 10 people including police
cars and racing cars but not including ambulances or hearses.
- Auto parts
store
- jobber and retail auto parts stores
which primarily sell automotive products and conduct business at the
retail level.
Top of Page
- Big Three
- General Motors, Ford and Chrysler.
- Body shop
- service outlet specializing in vehicle
body repair work.
- Bus
- passenger motor vehicle or chassis
having a seating capacity for more than 10 people.
- Buying
decisions
- the act of determining whether or not a
product purchase or repair, will be made, and/or which product or
service will be purchased.
Top of Page
- Capacity
- maximum production attainable under
normal conditions. With regard to normal conditions, the company's
operating practices are to be followed with respect to the use of
production facilities, overtime, workshifts, holidays, etc.
- Capital
Expenditures
- expenditures to acquire or add to
capital assets that will yield benefits over several accounting periods.
Included are cost of procuring, construction, installing new durable
plants, machinery and equipment where for replacement, addition or for
lease or rent to other companies including subsidies.
- Captive
Import
- an imported motor vehicle or part
manufactured by another automaker usually for sale under the brand name
of the importer.
- Casting
- a process technology that delivers a
liquid molten metal into a purpose-built mould. After cooling, the solid
metal surface has the shape of the mould cavity.
- Census value
added
- residual representing the difference
between the value of goods and industrial services produced and the
direct material costs associated with the production of goods.
- Changeover
- the refitting of equipment to either
neutralize the effects of the just completed production or to prepare
equipment for production of the next scheduled item, or both.
- Climate
Change
- the international concern that
increasing concentrations of greenhouse gases (GHGs) in the atmosphere
are changing the climate in ways deterimental to our social and economic
well-being.
- Component
- a raw material, ingredient, part or
subassembly that goes into a higher level assembly, compound, or other
item.
- Component
assembly
- a combination of two or more parts or
sub-components to form an assembly.
- Component
Design
- the activity for the fesign of specific
components including responsibility for material, cost, weight,
reliability, durability, fuction, appearance, serviceability.
- Concept
Vehicle
- a current production vehicle modified
for installation of new design concepts for evaluation of environmental
functional feasibility.
- Consumer
factors
- demographic characteristics of
consumers including age, gender, income and geographic location,
affordability.
- Corporate
Average Fuel Economy (CAFE)
- regulation enacted in 1975 which
requires a motor vehicle manufacturer to classify its U.S. vehicle fleet
sales as either domestic or import for the purpose of fuel economy
averaging.
- Cost of
production
- actual cost to the manufacturer of
producing a vehicle (does not include mark-up).
- Customs
duties
- customs duties levied on imported goods
under the Customs Tariff.
Top of Page
- Days' Supply
- number of days needed to sell all
vehicles in inventory, based on the previous month's sales rate.
- Dealer
- a firm that buys and sells, adding some
value for the consumer in the process. Dealer often means a firm which
operates closer in the distribution channel to the consumer than a
distributor or wholesaler, and may add more value for consumers than
either of the above-mentioned terms.
- Dealer
principal
- the individual or corporation that owns
and controls one or a number of auto dealerships.
- Die
- solid or hollow form used for shaping
materials by stamping, pressing, extruding, drawing or threading.
- Diffusion
- the way in which innovations spread
through market or non-market channels.
- Distributor
- synonymous with wholesalers;
distributors perform many of the same functions as wholesalers, such as
selling, physical distribution, credit, etc. Some industries use the
term distributor instead of wholesaler.
- Distribution
channel
- is the path goods take as their title
transfers from producer to consumer. The title transfer for consumer
goods is usually accompanied by transfer of the physical goods, as well.
-
Do-it-Yourself Market (DIY)
- the vehicle maintenance and repairs
conducted by the vehicle owner or friend/relative who purchase auto
parts from a retail outlet.
- Domestic
- a vehicle produced in Canada, United
States or Mexico.
- Door rates
- the hourly rates charged by dealers on
standardized units of service work. Hourly rates may or may not
correspond to an actual hour of work.
- Duty drawback
- import duties or taxes repaid by a
government in whole or in part, when the imported goods are re-exported
or used in the manufacture of exported goods.
- Duty paid
value
- in respect to imported goods, is the
aggregate value for duty on imported goods.
- Duty waiver
- forgiveness, in whole or in part, of
import duties when certain conditions are met.
Top of Page
- Electric
Vehicle
- cars, buses, vans or trucks which use
dedicated or hybrid electric systems as their power source.
- Employment
- total employment in each manufacturing
facility, including total manufacturing employees, total support staff,
and total engineering/R&D staff. Average number of workers employed by
an establishment during the year. Production workers relate to the
average number actually engaged in the manufacturing process.
Administrative and non-manufacturing includes employees at head offices
and sales offices.
- Employee
Benefits
- the provision of direct (salary,
bonuses, etc.) indirect (vacation leave, medical and dental plans, etc.)
and deferred employee compensation (pensions, etc.).
- Establishment
- smallest operating entity producing a
homogenous set of goods and services and is capable of reporting full
range of production account variables to calculate "valueadded".
Top of Page
- Free Trade
Agreement of the Americas (FTAA)
- an effort to unite the economies of the
Western Hemisphere into a single free trade arrangement. The Heads of
State of the 34 democracies in the region agreed to construct a "Free
Trade Area of the Americas" and to complete negotiations for the
agreement by 2005.
- Finance &
control
- ownership of company (ie. Canadian,
U.S., Japanese, German, etc.); public or private; capital investments:
buildings, machinery and equipment, tooling programs.
- Firm
- a business or institution comprising
sole proprietorships, partnerships, companies and other forms of
organizations.
- Fixed or One
Price Selling
- published fixed price displayed on a
new vehicle eliminating need for negotiation.
- Fixture
- device for holding goods in process
while working tools are in operation that does not contain any special
arrangements for guiding the working tools.
- Fleet sales
- the purchase of vehicles by a business
that meet a minimum requirement of units sold.
- Forecast
- prediction of future production or
sales in the automotive industry.
- Forging
- a process that transforms solid metal
into shapes of varying cross-sectional material thickness, often
involving heating.
- Franchise
- establishment that has the right to
exercise the powers of a corporation.
Top of Page
- G7 (Group of
Seven)
- seven industrial countries consisting
of the United States, Japan, Germany, France, the United Kingdom, Italy
and Canada, whose leaders have met at annual economic summits since 1975
to coordinate economic policies.
- General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)
- Signed in 1947, the GATT was a formal
multilateral agreement aimed at expanding and liberalizing world trade.
The World Trade Organization which is the successor to the GATT came
into existence on January 1, 1995.
- Generalized
Preferential Tariff (GPT)
- system of non-reciprocal tariff
prferences for the benefit of developing countries. It grants duty-free
or preferential entry to imports for elegible developing countries up to
a certain dollar value or import percentage limit.
- Greenhouse
gases (GHGs)
- group of gases which individually act
to trap solar energy near the earth. GHGs for which emission levels have
been estimated are carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4),
nitrous oxide (N2O), sulphur hexafluoride (SF6),
carbon tetrafluoride (CF4), carbon hexafluoride (C2F6)
and hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs).
- Gross Vehicle
Weight (GVW)
- Maximum legal weight at which a vehicle
can be operated.
Top of Page
- Heavy-duty
truck
- vehicle weighing from 26,001 to 33,001
lbs. Also included off-highway trucks.
Top of Page
- Ignition
System
- Electrical system devised to produce
timed sparks from engine spark plugs. Consisting of a battery, induction
coil, capacitor, distributor, spark plugs and relevant switches and
wiring.
- Importer
- an organization that typically operates
at arms length or under contractual agreement with manufacturers to
bring products made in another country into Canada.
- Import
Nameplate
- vehicles sold by manufacturers
primarily located outside North America whether assembled Overseas or in
North America.
- Independent
Repair Shop
- small service outlet offering
specialized repair services. They usually do not sell gasoline.
- Intellectual
Property Rights (IPR)
- the right to possess or control the use
of intellectual property, such as trademarks, copyrights, patents and
trade secrets.
- Interchannel
competition
- rivalry between different channels of
the distribution system. For example, independent retailers competing
with manufacturers' outlets.
- Intermediary
- firm or organization that operates
between the producer of the goods and the end purchaser. Thus, the
members of the distribution channel noted above are intermediaries or
"middlemen".
- Intrachannel
competition
- rivalry between channel participants at
the same level in the distribution channel. For example, department
stores competing with one another.
- Inventories
- book value of inventory owned and held
in Canada.
Top of Page
- Jigs
- device used in the accurate machining
of good in process by holding the goods firmly and guiding tools exactly
to position.
- Joint Venture
- an international business collaboration
between foreigh interests and private parties from a host country in
which two or more parties establish a new business enterprise to which
each contributes and where ownership and control are shared.
- Just-in-Time
(JIT)
- refers to the movement of material to
the necessary place at the necessary time. It is part of a business
philosophy based on achieving excellence in a manufacturing company
through the continuous elimination of waste.
Top of Page
- Kaizen
Activities
- activity through which continuous
improvement is sought.
- Kyoto
Protocol
- international agreement among
industrialized countries to reduce greenhouse gas emissions negotiated
in Kyoto, Japan in December 1997. Canada committed to reduce its
greenhouse gas emissions by 6 percent of 1990 levels between 2008 and
2012.
Top of Page
- Lease
- form of contract transferring the use
of a vehicle in consideration of payment.
- Light truck
- vehicle weighing less than 14,000 lbs.
- Light
vehicles
- passenger cars and light trucks.
- Loss Leaders
- Products whose prices are cut with the
idea that they will attract customers to the store.
Top of Page
- Make
- brand name of a car or truck (ie.
Chevrolet, Ford, Dodge, Honda).
-
Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price (MSRP)
- Dealers typically sell at a discount to
this price.
- Machining
- an operation which shapes metal parts
by carving away excess material as chips produced in a sequential
process of turning, milling and grinding operations.
- Manufacturing
- process technology (ie. metal forming,
machining, injection moulding, blow moulding, die casting, forgings,
electronics/electrical, assembly, coating/plating); capacity utilization
(in percent); production volumes; strategic alliances (eg. joint
ventures, technology agreements).
- Margin or
gross margin
- the return an intermediary achieves on
the selling price of the article. That is, if the intermediary buys a
product for $1 and sells it for $1.50, the margin is calculated. For
example, .50 divided by $1.50, or 33%.
- Market share
- The percentage of total sales
represented by an individual manufacturer/importer, make or nameplate.
- Mark-up
- the return an intermediary achieves on
the cost price of an article. Using the same example described above,
mark-up is .50 divided by $1, or 50%.
- Maquila (maquiladora)
- Mexican assembly plant located near the
U.S.-Mexican border where most production is exported to the United
States.
- Mechanic
installed market (MIL)
- vehicle maintenance and repair
conducted by a mechanic/professional at a service outlet.
- Medium-duty
truck
- vehicle weighing from 14,001 to 26,000
lbs.
- Mercosur
- the southern cone common market of
Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay. Mercosur enacted a common
external tariff on January 1, 1995 for almost 85 percent of tariff items
of the four countries; most trade among members will be duty-free.
- Metal forming
- solid metal and molten metal process
such as casting, forging, stamping and machining.
-
Methylcyclopentadienyl Manganese Tricarbonyl (MML)
- MMT is an organic manganese compound.
It is used as a fuel additive designed to enhance octane levels in
gasoline.
- Model line
- group of motor vehicles having the same
platform or model name.
- Model name
- word, group of words, letter, number or
similar designation assigned to a motor vehicle by a marketing division
of a motor vehicle assembler.
- Most-Favoured-Nation
(MFN) Treatment
- one country's commitment to extend to
another ocuntry the lowest tariff rates that it applies to any third
country.
- Motor Vehicle
Saftey Act (MVSA)
- Act which regulates the manufacture and
importation of motor vehicles and motor vehile equipment to reduce risk
of death, injury and damage to property and the environment.
- Mould
- hollow form, matrix or cavity into
which materials are placed to produce goods of desired shapes.
Top of Page
- Net sales
value
- the selling price received by the
manufacturer for the vehicle including the cost of transporting the
vehicle in Canada (includes mark-up).
- New car
dealer
- major car dealership with a parts and
service operation.
- North
American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
- Agreement creating free trade amone the
United States, Canada, and Mexico. The NAFTA went into effect on January
1, 1994.
- North
American Industrial Classification System (NAICS)
- Industry Classification between Canada,
the United States and Mexico to increase compatibility of data with
these countries. The classification is based on establishment rather
than commodity. This classification system will be implemented with
reference to year 1997 and data will be available in 1999.
- North
American produced
- motor vehicles assembled in Canada, the
United States or Mexico.
Top of Page
- Off-Highway
Vehicle
- Vehicle intended for operation on
unmade surfaces or rough terrain (i.e. for construction or agriculture).
- On Board
Diagnostics (OBD)
- a unit that monitors the Electric
Control Unit and system responses for errors during normal vehicle
operations. When the vehicle is serviced, this information on the errors
can be down loaded and displayed to the service personnel which will
facilitate the trouble shooting process.
- Operating
profit
- pre-tax earnings after deducting all
operating expenses from gross margin.
- Organization
for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)
- an organization whose purpose is to
provide its 29 Member countries with a forum in which governments can
compare their experiences, discuss the problems they share and seek
solutions which can then be applied within their own national contexts.
Each member country is committed to the principles of the market economy
and pluralistic democracy.
- Outlet
- synonymous with vehicle dealership.
- Overcapacity
- the situation where maximum global
prodution of automobiles exceeds the total global demand for
automobiles.
Top of Page
- Partnership
for a New Generation of Vehicles (PNGV)
- established in 1993, this partnership,
between the United States Federal Government and the Automotive
industry, was founded to establish global technical leadership in the
development and production of affordable, fuel-efficient, low emission
vehicles that meet today's performance standards.
- Passenger
vehicle
- four wheeled motor vehicle that also
includes mini-vans and sport utility vehicles.
- Plastic
moulding
- a process that converts organic-based
materials, by means of a general-purpose press and purpose-built tooling
under controlled heat and pressure, and injects the hot material into a
die cavity shaped in the final form of the intended part.
- Platform
- primary load-bearing structural
assembly of a motor vehicle determining the basic size of the motor
vehicle, and is the structural base that supports the driveline and
links the suspension components of the motor vehicle.
- Pneumatic
Tire
- Flexible, hollow rubber forming the
outer part of the vehicle wheel and inflated by air pressure.
- Product
design
- the process of planning the product's
specifications.
- Product
planning
- a function whereby an enterprise is
responsible for the efficient, planning, scheduling and coordination of
production activities.
- Product
testing
- rigorous methods whereby a product's
quality and durability are measured.
- Production
engineering
- planning and control of the mechanical
means of changing the shape, condition of materials toward greater
effectiveness and value.
- Productivity
- relative measure of output per labour
and/or machine output.
- Program cars
- automobiles sold by manufacturers for
fleet use. Usually applies to very large fleets, such as those of car
rental companies.
- Program
Objectives
- A consensus of what has been determined
to be the most marketable product for a given model year.
- Purchasing
- total materials purchased for
manufacturing/assembly into auto parts (ie. steel, plastics, rubber,
textiles, etc.).
Top of Page
- QDC
- quick die change.
- Quality
- conformance to requirements in relation
to a degree of excellence.
Top of Page
- Refit
- closure of a plant for the purpose of
plant conversion or retooling.
- Registration
- motor vehicle ownership that is filed
with the province/state.
- Research &
development
- R&D expenditures (product and process
development).
Top of Page
- SAE
- Society of Automotive Engineers.
- Sales
- total automotive product sales
(vehicles, automotive parts, including OE and aftermarket).
- Scientific
Research and Experimental Development (SR&ED) Program
- this program provides generous
incentives for industrial research and development in Canada. The
program allows individuals and companies to deduct 100 percent of
qualified current SR and ED expenditures and capital SR and ED
expenditures.
- Scrappage
- a vehicle registered in the previous
year but not re-registered in the current year.
- Service
station
- outlets which sell gasoline and are
operated by the major oil companies.
- Shipments
(value of)
- summation of value of shipments
produced by establishment, receipts of custom and repair revenue.
- Special
services
- a category that describes plants which
add value to automotive parts manufactured by others by using process
such as painting, plating, heat treatment, etc.
- Specialty
repair shop
- retail outlet which offers specialized
vehicle products and service.
- SUV
- Sports Utility Vehicle.
- Stamping
- a process technology which manufactures
automotive parts by shaping rolled sheet metal or by bending or
stretching it in a sequence of purpose-built tools fitted to a general
purpose press.
- Standard
Industrial Classification (SIC)
- industry class that represents a level
of organization of production by type of specialization. Currently the
1980 Standard Industrial Classification is in effect identifying each
industry at the 4 digit level.
- Supplier Cost
Reduction Effort (SCORE)
- a United States program that urges
suppliers to develop processes to cut costs. Suppliers are allowed to
keep half the savings and pass on the other half to the automakers.
Top of Page
- Tariff
- A duty or tax imposed on imports.
- Tier 1
Supplier
- manufacturer to the vehicle assemblers
who are responsible for delivery of the finished assembly, product
development and continued technology renewal.
- Tier 2
Supplier
- producer of parts providing value-added
to minor sub-assembly.
- Tier 3
Supplier
- supplier of engineered materials and
special services, such as rolls of sheet steel, bars and heat treating,
surface treatments.
- Tire store
- retail outlet selling tires and
offering vehicle repair services.
- Total Quality
Management (TQM)
- A management technique to improve the
quality of goods and services, reduce operating costs and increase
customer satisfaction.
- Tool
- device for use in, or attachment to,
production machinery that is for the assembling of materials or the
working of materials by turning, milling, grinding, polishing, drilling,
punching, boring, shaping, shearing, pressing or planing.
- Tooling
- set of required standard or special
tools needed to produce a particular part; includes jigs, fixtures,
gages and cutting tools, but excluding machined tools.
- Trim Level
- vehicle designation assigned by vehicle
manufacturers that represent specific equipment packages.
Top of Page
- United States
Council for Automotive Research (USCAR)
- an organization founded by Chrysler,
Ford, and General Motors to strengthen the technology base of the
domestic automotive industry through research and co-operation.
- Used vehicle
- vehicle that has been previously owned
or driven.
Top of Page
- VA
- Value analysis.
- VE
- Value engineering.
- VER
- Voluntary export restraint in relation
to Japanese manufacturers exporting to Canada (no longer in effect).
- VRA
- Voluntary restraint agreement in
relation to Japanese manufacturers exporting to the United States (no
longer in effect).
- Vehicle
Identification Umber (VIN)
- Number assigned to a vehicle by the
manufacturer primarily for registration and identification purposes
(consisting of numerals and letters).
Top of Page
- Windsor
Experiment
- Chrysler Canada, in partnership with
government and educational institutions, has launched a number of
initiatives collectively referred to as the Windsor Experiment. The
Windsor Experiment conducts studies to benchmark "best practice"
training and education in Europe, and applied the results in various
skills development programs.
- Wholesaler
- an intermediary which sells to other
intermediaries, such as a firm that buys from a manufacturer and sells
to a retailer.
- World Trade
Organization (WTO)
- Created by the Uruguay Round and
successor to the GATT, this new organization began operations on January
1, 1995.
Top of Page
Sources
3 M Automotive Glossary -1997
A Resource Book for Science and Technology Consultations Volume 1
Secretariat for Science and Technology Review Industry Canada June
1994
Apics Dictionary The Official Dictionary of Production and Inventory
Management; Prepared by Thomas F. Wallace and John R. Dougherty
Automotive Competitveness Review, Industry Canada
Automotive Industries Association
Automotive News 1997 Market Data Book
Automotive Parts Manufacturers' Association
Concise Dictionary of Business Terminology Dr. Albert G. Giordano
1981
General Motors Automotive Terminology 1991
McGraw-Hill Concise Encyclopedia of Science and Technology 1994
Canada Customs and Revenue Agency Motor Vehicle Tariff Order, 1988
dated January 1991 The Annotated Excise Tax Act
SAE Dictionary of Automotive Engineering Don Goodsell 1989
Transportation Equipment Industries Catalogue No. 42-251
Standard Industrial Classification (1980) Catalogue No. 12-E
Capital and Repair Expenditures Manufacturing Sub-Industries
Catalogue 61-214
U.S. Department of Commerce
U.S. Industrial Outlook 1994
U.S. Global Trade Outlook, 1995-2000
Ward's Automotive Yearbook 1998
Top of Page
|
|