With less than 8 days of fan fare and excitement, the Cash for Clunkers
program started and appears now to have ended. According to Transportation
Secretary Ray LaHood, "If we don't get the $2 billion from the Senate, we
would have to suspend the program." The program in question gives consumers
up to $4500.00 in rebates if they trade in a car with poor gas mileage.
Supporters claim the popularity of the program is evidence of its success.
Others aren't so sure. They think it reveals a woeful inability of
government bureaucracies to predict and administer economic assistance for
the American economy. Originally the program creators predicted the funds
would last through November. Since supposedly basic math skills were all
that would be required to make projections on the program's timing, how
could the program have run out of money in a week?
When surveys say Americans have high levels of skepticism about the ability
of Washington to respond to the economy's morass, perhaps the Cash for
Clunkers gives some insight into that sentiment. Increasingly, Americans
recognize that the economic downturn we are experiencing is greater than any
we've faced in more than a generation. Not quite a depression, some
economists are now referring to it as the Great Recession. Its impact is
powerful and comprehensive. As American households across the nation gear up
for the long haul, many are wondering why Washington hasn't gotten the
message that a real change in policy direction is needed, particularly when
it comes to the American auto industry.

After spending billions on Chrysler and GM directly, enacting the "Cash for
Clunkers" bill, and with little to show for their efforts so far, Washington
is undaunted. In addition to talk of extending the clunkers bill, they are
pushing for bailouts for the dealers whose hardships they created, as well
as promoting "technology" loan assistance to Ford Motor Company - the one
remaining member of the Big Three that hasn't already been tainted with
federal control via government subsidy.
Notwithstanding the over-regulation and litigation that has made the auto
industry particularly vulnerable during this economic downturn, rather than
make problems worse with more of the same from Washington, Congress should
focus on consumers and competition - forces that actually have the power to
turn-around this industry.
It simply is not true that federal policy requiring ever-greater fuel
efficiency and emissions reductions line up with the interests of the buying
public. One glaring fact is that, for the last 15 years, the single best
selling vehicle in the U.S. has been that paragon of fuel efficiency, the
American pick-up truck. Yet Washington still insists that automakers must
focus ever-greater efforts on selling smaller, lighter "enviro" friendly
autos regardless of consumer interest.
Derided as "automotive birth control" by car aficionados, these Washington
mandated vehicles have been seen by the auto buying public (particularly in
the exurbs) as unattractive, unsafe, slow and incapable of meeting the basic
transportation needs of working families. Consider: every Toyota Prius, the
icon of fuel efficiency, is sold at a loss. In other words the other cars
Toyota sells subsidize the cost of making the Prius available to the public.
Even when gasoline was over $4 a gallon Toyota couldn't profitably sell the
Prius. On the other hand pick-up trucks, SUVs and sports cars are much more
profitable to make than hybrids and they outsell the hybrids by nearly ten to one.
Continuing mandates that ever greater percentages of the new vehicles
manufactured must be either hybrids and/or emissions free vehicles can only
be considered what economists call the "the Triumph of Hope over
Experience." This mindset is damaging to the auto industry and to the
taxpayer.
Yet Washington continues with its agenda - piling up one initiative to prop
up another. When the public raced away from GM over news of its impending
government takeover, the White House announced that the federal government
would back the warranties of all GM vehicles.
This is exactly the wrong message.
One key means of restoring consumer confidence is to shift away from
government involvement and instead encourage competition among dealers and
after market (independent repair) service providers. Rather than having U.S.
government infused in the automotive industry, we should lower the costs of
servicing and maintaining all vehicles -- new and old.
A measure before Congress called the Motor Vehicle Owners' Right to Repair
Act should be placed on the front burner. This bill would ensure that both
dealer and aftermarket (independent) repair shops can provide automobile
repair service.
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