One thing the article doesn’t mention is what the statistics are on how many people who lost jobs, houses and cars would like or need one of these traded in clunkers to get to job interviews and buy food. Of course, the engines of the clunkers are destroyed by government order so they can’t be resold or given away. But then again, C for C is about the climate, not the economy.

The “Cash for Clunkers” program has been a “great success”, at least according to the government, and the auto industry. Within days of its kickoff, all $1 billion allocated to the program has been used up by Americans who have eagerly lined up to trade their clunkers for new vehicles. […] According to Edmunds, about 200,000 old low mileage cars would normally traded in, every 3 months, in exchange for more efficient higher mileage cars, without this program. […] If everyone qualified for $4,500 per vehicle, about 222,000 vehicles would have just taken advantage of the government’s money. At $3,500, 286,000 vehicles will have been sold. […I]f all buyers have qualified for the higher $4,500 rebate, the “cash for clunkers” program will mean a marginal increase in car sales of 22,000 this quarter. $1 billion divided by 22,000 means a net cost to the government of $45,354 per car.

If all buyers only qualify for the $3,500 rebate, it means a marginal increase in sales of about 86,000, or a net cost to the taxpayers of $11,628 per vehicle. In all likelihood, however, there will probably be a mix of vehicles qualifying for various rebates between $3,500 and $4,500. Based upon that assumption, Edmunds.com estimates that the average cost to the taxpayer will be about $20,000 per vehicle.

Even most of the marginally extra sales really represent people who were going to buy a new car eventually anyway. They are just buying a bit sooner than they expected. Old clunkers don’t last forever, and they are almost all eventually replaced. The government is shifting tomorrow’s demand to today, stealing from tomorrow to pay for today, but at great cost to the taxpayer.

The “cash for clunkers” program is yet another boondoogle – an expensive waste of precious taxpayer dollars.

Thankfully, an extra $2 billion that was just lying around was made available to keep the program going. I wonder what happens when that runs out. But who cares about the cost when the environment is at stake? Right?




  1. ECA says:

    Then it was a good change..

    At least you understand the reasoning of a vehicle.
    There are to many that DONT..Iv seen a FULL cab with a family in it, drive around with NOTHING or a reason, except the GUY WANTED A TRUCK

  2. Rick Cain says:

    No more cash for clunkers!

    I think our economic problems can be fixed by giving CEO’s a big fat bonus. It has worked in the past, no?


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