Let me see what that yields:
- Assume that the average person drives 12,000 miles per year.
- Assume that the average mileage a car gets is 22 MPG.
- Assume that there are 250 million vehicles in the U.S.
- Assume that the MPG of the lowest 25 million is 15 MPG.
- Assume that a new car MPG is 29 MPG.
Then, for $112.5 billion spread over 5 years:
- 25 million 15 MPG vehicles would be replaced by 29 MPG vehicles.
- At 12,000 miles per year, x25 million by a 14 MPG difference:
- 10.3 billion gallons of gasoline would be saved per year.
- 10.3 B gallons x $2.50 / gal = $25 billion saved per year or $125 billion over 5 years.
About 17 million cars per year are sold in America. This "Cash for Clunkers" program would cover (or add to that number) 5 million cars sold per year. For $112.5 billion, the federal government could (a) bail out or prop up the auto industry for the next 5 years, (b) spur domestic spending, (c) decrease vehicle gasoline consumption and increase fuel efficiency of cars in America by at least 6%.
It's not much, but like I said, if you're going to bail out the auto industry, I would think that this is a much more practical and beneficial way of doing it.
2 comments:
I quit driving 4 years ago, where's my check ?
Good point.
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