Cash for Clunkers Cost $24,000 Per Veh.

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Cash for Clunkers Cost $24,000 Per Veh.

Postby blueblood » Thu, 29 Oct 2009 09:12:38 GMT

http://www.edmunds.com/help/about/press ... ticle.html

If there were ever any doubts that the Government and specifically this adminsistration cound break an anvil with a rubber hammer here is more.............................
The program also propelled Hyundai past Chrysler in domestic sales, and the bulk of the sales went to "foriegn" makers. We could have given the cars away like Oprah and been much better off!! So who got the money?

Cash for Clunkers Results Finally In: Taxpayers Paid $24,000 per Vehicle Sold, Reports Edmunds.com

SANTA MONICA, Calif. — October 28, 2009 — Edmunds.com, the premier resource for online automotive information, has determined that Cash for Clunkers cost taxpayers $24,000 per vehicle sold.

Nearly 690,000 vehicles were sold during the Cash for Clunkers program, officially known as CARS, but Edmunds.com analysts calculated that only 125,000 of the sales were incremental. The rest of the sales would have happened anyway, regardless of the existence of the program.

Ironically, the average transaction price for a new vehicle in August 2009 was only $26,915 minus an average cash rebate of $1,667
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Re: Cash for Clunkers Cost $24,000 Per Veh.

Postby Tracy » Thu, 29 Oct 2009 11:21:28 GMT

BlueBlood, i thought we could have done the same thing by giving away cars instead of giving the money to GM. GM is building cars, workers are getting paid supplies are sending there product and getting paid. The new cars save the consumer money on fuel so they can spend on other things causing a ripple effect. Instead we have this .. thanks for posting this infomration
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Re: Cash for Clunkers Cost $24,000 Per Veh.

Postby blueblood » Thu, 05 Nov 2009 08:36:22 GMT

'Clunker' data show pickup-for-pickup trades

WASHINGTON – Billed as a way for the government to put more fuel-efficient vehicles on highways, the popular $3 billion Cash for Clunkers program mostly involved swaps of old Ford or Chevrolet pickups for new ones that got only marginally better gas mileage, according to an analysis of new federal data by The Associated Press.

The single most common swap — which occurred more than 8,200 times — involved Ford F150 pickup owners who took advantage of a government rebate to trade their old trucks for new Ford F150s. They were 17 times more likely to buy a new F150 than, say, a Toyota Prius. The fuel economy for the new trucks ranged from 15 mpg to 17 mpg based on engine size and other factors, an improvement of just 1 mpg to 3 mpg over the clunkers.

Owners of thousands more large, old Chevrolet and Dodge pickups bought new Silverado and Ram trucks, also with only barely improved mileage in the middle teens, accSome deals raise eyebrows:

• In at least 145 cases, mostly involving trucks, the government reported consumers traded old vehicles that got better than or the same mileage as the new vehicle they purchased. The government said it was continuing to investigate. "It's possible some quirky deal slipped through the cracks," Anwyl said.

• In at least 15 deals in nine states, owners of large pickups cashed in old trucks for between $3,500 and $4,500 toward new Hummer H3 SUVs that got only 16 mpg.

• In at least 32 deals, drivers traded older vehicles for new large trucks — including versions of Toyota Tundras, GMC Sierras, Chevrolet Silverados, Dodge Rams and Ford F150 pickups — that got only 14 mpg.
ording to AP's analysis of sales of $15.2 billion worth of vehicles at nearly 19,000 car dealerships in every state. Those deals helped the Ford F150 and Chevy Silverado — along with Ford's Escape midsize SUV — climb into the Top 10 most-popular vehicles purchased with the government rebates. The most common truck-for-truck and truck-for-SUV deals totaled at least $911 million.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20091105/ap_ ... r_clunkers
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