Posted by Kenneth Anderson:
Is Cash for Clunker's Really Win-Win, as Representative Carnahan Says?
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_08_02-2009_08_08.shtml#1249511193


   My wife and I are pretty conservative financially - our second car is
   a 1992 Honda Civic, bought used from a neighbor with 30,000 miles on
   it in 1998, and it now has 60,000 miles on it, because - again, part
   of our pretty financially conservative life style - we live walking
   distance to my school office. However, the car has no airbags, and
   with Beloved Daughter newly-driver's licensed, we would like to buy a
   new sedan, something that (groan) will eventually become her car.
   Therefore, cheap, cheap to drive, safe, and super, super reliable.
   Hence something like a new Honda Civic.

   Along comes cash for clunkers. Having bought the fuel efficient car
   the first time around, I look down the list and see ... no Honda
   Civic! However, I just saw a video of Rep. Russ Carnahan of Missouri
   informing the press (but not the protesting constituents held outside
   the doors) that the cash for clunker program is a 'win-win.'
   ([1]Midway through the video; I'm not posting the video for Dana's
   comments, but Carnahan's.)

   (I was interested to see that the local NPR affiliate, KWMU, reported
   that the protestors[2] "tried to break up the event but were kept out
   of the showroom." Looking at the video, I couldn't see any evidence
   that the protestors tried to break it up, and they left the showroom
   as requested. If someone at KWMU wanted to offer the factual basis for
   the preceding sentence, I'd be interested.)

   I am trying to figure out how it is a win for me, in anything other
   than an abstract social goodness sense. I don't get a financial
   benefit of $4500 on turning in my car - which, in buying a Honda
   Civic, is far from minor - because I was prudent and good enough to
   think about gas mileage rather than simply buying the SUV
   monstrosities that the other families in our neighborhood were
   snapping up.

   In addition, it seems to me possible - more than possible - that the
   price of that new Honda Civic is going to be more than it otherwise
   would be, because a government cash subsidy to the person who made the
   socially wrong decisions in past years will support the price of that
   new Honda Civic at something higher than it otherwise would be. Which
   I will pay, without any offsetting subsidy. Hmm. If this sounds
   whining, well, I am, because I have this feeling that my wife's and my
   very middle class financial prudence is, once again, getting played
   for a sucker.

   But okay, past the whining, here's my question. Can you devise a way
   in which the program could accomplish its goals - and I'm not in
   principle opposed to getting clunkers off the road - without requiring
   that the prudent once again subsidize the imprudent?

   If you want to explain to me how this is not merely a subsidy
   supported by the whole or, worse, a transfer from the prudent to the
   imprudent, I'm open to explanation and if persuaded I'll quit whining.
   But it does seem to me that not only don't I get a cash benefit that
   other people get as a reward for what, on the Congress's apparent view
   of things, are their anti-social buying habits - I'm going to pay a
   higher price for the new car than I otherwise would. If that's not
   correct, please explain to me why not. Or, if it is, tell me how the
   program might be revised to avoid these bad outcomes, or else why it
   is not possible.

References

   1. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q2ZjdwU5wsY
   2. 
http://www.publicbroadcasting.net/kwmu/news.newsmain/article/1/0/1538537/KWMU.News/Protesters.target.St..Louis.Democrats.on.spending

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