well, it is slightly verifiable. did prices go up and did sales slump after the program was over?
9/19/2010 9:36:13 PM
We can skip both of those and go right to the sourcehttp://apps.itd.idaho.gov/apps/MediaManagerViewer/NewsClipping/Story.aspx?ID=43711&Type=NewsClipping
9/19/2010 9:57:25 PM
that tells us nothing
9/19/2010 10:13:38 PM
9/19/2010 10:47:48 PM
9/19/2010 10:58:14 PM
I haven't taken the time to develop my own explanation. But, it appears you haven't either.
9/20/2010 6:51:49 AM
No, I said what I think happened. Given the statistics that the effect on total car sales was negligible, what else could have happened but what I said happened? They made more cars, but they were stolen by space aliens?
9/20/2010 9:39:33 AM
I heard some economist guy say the Cash for Clunkers program would have only made sense if it had run for 2-3 years. #unsourcedsoapboxposts
9/20/2010 9:41:55 AM
I would have bought a car during cash for clunkers but I was 1 mpg off the maximum. totally gay. so im just going to drive it until it becomes more expensive to repair than buy a new one. At which point I'll probably buy another used car. But theres no fuckin way i'd buy a GM.So yes, cash for clunkers may have inflated new car sales for a small period of time, but this was subtracted from future new and used car sales. So i guess if it did anything of benefit to automakers it replaced some used car sales with new car sales. The entire industry is bullshit though. Vertical integration means when part of the stack fails the whole thing falls. No sympathy here.
9/20/2010 9:48:45 AM
I did C4C and can honestly say it prompted me to buy a car I wouldn't have bought otherwise. $11,600 Honda Civic EX ftw! I'm a little bit surprised I haven't sold it for a profit and bought something a little more sporting, but I'm actually enjoying the car quite a bit.
9/20/2010 3:36:46 PM
This idea was prejudice from the beginning against people like my parents who actually bought decent cars on gas to begin with.
9/20/2010 6:03:10 PM
9/20/2010 9:09:55 PM
9/20/2010 9:50:16 PM
So, let me clarify. The evidence that we all seem to agree on is that cfc had no medium term impact on car sales. I offered a theory as to how this happened when the government gave away so much money. You don't like my theory because I failed to mention China, but at the same time will offer no theory of your own? Sounds great. Doesn't change the evidence. cfc was stupid and should not be repeated.
9/20/2010 11:51:38 PM
9/21/2010 6:55:52 AM
You offered no explanation beyond "I haven't taken the time to develop my own explanation"
9/21/2010 8:46:34 AM
Are you trolling here or what? At the risk of a gross waste of time, we'll go back to the beginning.You: I suspect the trick was that manufacturers did not expand production in response.Completely baseless with no supporting evidence.You cont: As such, all the stimulus buying did was eat into inventories and bid up prices.As such hell. A conclusion based on a pulled out of the hat premise. Certainly, this is valid!You: driving customers away once the stimulus was overYou later: Given the statistics that the effect on total car sales was negligibleNegligible? If customers were being driven away due to higher prices then the effect would be NEGATIVE. No, the credit probably pulled in folks that wouldn't have otherwise bought (just maybe not yet) in addition to those that were buying anyway. The demand pulled forward but the overall intermediate term trend remained. This is if we only include the US market and this is before we analyze what inventory levels and prices were before and after the program. Demand isn't the only factor in pricing, yet it seems to be the only thing you focused on.Me: [link showing car companies hired in response to C4C]What do you think happened? Was it a grand conspiracy by the central planner to funnel taxpayer dollars through to union employees without them actually doing any work? Did the automakers pay part of the proceeds from the giveaway to wages and sat on the rest, or perhaps bought treasuries, MBS? Of course not, they did what everyone else has been doing in the past year (sans banks) and believed in the recovery and began an inventory rebuild. The ISM bears this out. Car sales in China continue to grow.I offered this explanation already, you apparently willfully ignored it or are simply trolling with the best of them.[Edited on September 21, 2010 at 10:02 AM. Reason : p]
9/21/2010 9:42:18 AM
Hi, Chance.
9/21/2010 9:59:07 AM
^ LOL!
9/21/2010 10:03:31 AM
Remember what we are talking about. We are trying to explain this:Economics dictates that when you subsidize something people buy more of it. Even if you only subsidize it for a little while. But here is an odd case where the laws of economics did not apply. Nearly every car sold under the subsidy was off-set by a non-sale later on. We have anecdotal evidence that many people that would not have bought a car, did so thanks to the subsidy. As such, for every person that did, there must have been someone that was going to buy a car, but because of the subsidy chose not to. I gave a theory. Dealers raised prices with the promise of subsidized customers eager to buy, driving those that were ineligible for the subsidy away in equal numbers to those buying only because they were eligible. I still have yet to hear a theory from you. Your sole point seems to be that GM increased production. No explanation as to why GM increased production of cars but did not manage to increase their sales of cars.
9/21/2010 12:51:44 PM
9/21/2010 5:40:37 PM
9/21/2010 6:57:52 PM
9/21/2010 7:17:29 PM
9/21/2010 8:01:38 PM
No, it seems very often you post your theory based on basic economics and then become pigheaded when you are challenged. Your last post comes across fairly blasé yet this earlier in the page you were very certain of your theory
9/21/2010 9:16:40 PM