Youngstown News, CARS gave the industry a boost; it’s worth extending
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CARS gave the industry a boost; it’s worth extending


Published: Mon, August 3, 2009 @ 12:00 a.m.

CARS gave the industry a boost; it’s worth extending

The “cash for clunkers” program hasn’t been perfect, but it’s been a success.

Not all the numbers are in, but Ford Motor Co.’s top sales analyst credited the program with helping give Ford its first monthly sales increase in two years.

We’re sure there will be a lot of foreign-marque cars sold through the program, too, and that won’t sit well with some people. That was one of the complaints about a similar program that was launched in Germany earlier this year.

But the cash for clunkers was designed to do a number of things: get less fuel-efficient cars off the road, thus creating a long-range benefit in the need for imported oil; reduce pollution; give car sales a boost, which has a beneficial effect throughout the industry, from the assembly line to the dealership, and it provides and opportunity for thousands of people with older low-value trade-ins to do something they might not have dreamed about doing, buying a brand new car.

The popularity of the program was such that those who didn’t move quickly might be out of luck.

The $1 billion provided for the Car Allowance Rebate System (CARS) was designed to spur about 250,000 car sales and run for months. Within days, the Department of Transportation, which oversees the program, announced that it was running out of money.

The U.S. House responded quickly, approving a $2 billion additional appropriation on Friday. But it’s going to be a tougher fight in the Senate, where Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., told reporters he is prepared to lead a filibuster.

Splitting the vote

Getting 60 votes to break that filibuster won’t be easy, since some Democrats expressed dissatisfaction with some parts of the original appropriation. On the other hand, some Republicans have already expressed their support for an extension, including Sen. George V. Voinovich of Ohio.

Voinovich, whose credentials as a deficit hawk are at least as good as McCain’s, also realizes that giving the nation’s last great manufacturing sector a shot in the arm makes good sense.

Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said in an interview Sunday that car and truck building had begun to rebound even before the program got under way. But, he added, “there is no doubt that that very extraordinary response is a very important indicator that the state of confidence in the economy is beginning to pick up.” If the incentive program had gone into place six months ago, he said, “it would have probably been a dud.”

To the extent that the enthusiastic response to CARS reflects an increase in consumer confidence, opponents in the Senate might want to be careful. No senator, regardless of state or party, should want to be seen as tamping down consumer confidence just as it begins to grow.

If CARS needs some quick tweaking, the Senate should feel free to do so. Killing CARS would be a real clunker.


Comments

1Search4Answers(688 comments)posted 2 years, 6 months ago

Gosh, it's odd how giving away money can be so successful. I wonder how that can be.

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2Search4Answers(688 comments)posted 2 years, 6 months ago

I think the government spends half of their time just trying to figure out cool acronyms for their projects. We have now CARS, COPS, TARP, TALF, and probably countless others we don't know about. I think we should have a new exercise program with its long name of Civilian Recreational Activity Program.

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3Chief178(49 comments)posted 2 years, 6 months ago

What a big waste of our taxpayer’s money! Where do the clunkers go? To the crusher or to some other lot where they can be re-sold and put back on the street.

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4msweetwood(112 comments)posted 2 years, 6 months ago

Chief:

As we reported July 24: "Dealers must scrap the trade-in cars."

Mark Sweetwood
Managing Editor

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5Chief178(49 comments)posted 2 years, 6 months ago

I'll believe it when I see it. In too many cases like this the program it is misused. I hope you’re right Sir.

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6Chief178(49 comments)posted 2 years, 6 months ago

Here is a clip of a clunker being scraped. Looked like a nice car that still had a few miles in it. I'm not sure how this is saving the environment.

http://www.youtube.com:80/watch?v=waj...

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7Search4Answers(688 comments)posted 2 years, 6 months ago

Chief, that felt so wrong to watch them destroy a vehicle like that for no reason. Heck, I would have gladly taken that car... that was a very nice looking vehicle and I'm sure any high schooler could only dream of finding a "clunker" like that.

How does it help the environment? I'm sure it saves energy to I don't know keep a perfectly operating vehicle in the market instead of destroying it to be crushed, sent to china, remade into something else, and sent back here.

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8stoutmaster(24 comments)posted 2 years, 6 months ago

This virtually doesn't do anything to help the environment. This doesn't help the people who cannot afford car payments. All it does is shorten the supply of used cars, and parts. All it will do is raise the price of the used cars that are left, and make them more costly to fix.

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9stoutmaster(24 comments)posted 2 years, 6 months ago

By the way, if they ran out of money for the Cars program sooner than expected( 4 days instead of 4 months) like the gov't projected. It would stand to reason that the gov't will run out of money for the "free healthcare" much sooner than projected.

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10redvert(1656 comments)posted 2 years, 6 months ago

My thought is that this program has done nothing more than sell cars now that will result in less sales in the future. Of course if the dealers bargain at all it is off the sticker price. If customers are dumb enough to do that instead of starting at the invoice price then they deserve what they get!

A local new car salesperson told me that she has seen people approved for this program that should not really have been approved. I wonder if the same people that screwed over us with the Fannie May/Freddie Mac fiasco made the rules for this crap. More of the Maxine Waters/Barney Frank show?

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11jhenry1908(1 comment)posted 2 years, 5 months ago

Generally, trade-in vehicles must get 18 or less MPG (some very large pick-up trucks and cargo vans have different requirements)

Jhenry
Blogger
www.cashforclunkersfacts.info
http://www.cashforclunkersfacts.info

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