Posted on 01/07/2011 3:03:44 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
Victor Dial writes in todays WSJ, Ou Est Le Cash for Clunkers? Not surprisingly, the idea of subsidizing new cars came from France.
You probably wonder whos Victor, and what does he have to do with cash-for-clunkers?
Most Americans wouldnt know it, but the Cash for Clunkers model originated in Europe in the mid-1980s. I was in charge of sales and marketing for Peugeot at the time, and the government-incentive idea was co-developed by my company, Renault and the French government. Merci beaucoup for that beaut, Vic! Now, heres what happened: the automakers wanted a handout, and the labor unions and the environmentalists love it.
The losers were French taxpayers, but then they are accustomed to suffering in impotent silence. As Hillary once said, you dont have to love it, you just have to toe the line. Of course Vic was surprised when the Americans didnt exactly embrace the idea,
When the program started in 2009, I admit I was surprised at the almost immediate outcry from economists, pundits and, yes, citizens, denouncing it as wasteful. They were, of course, right: It pulls forward new car sales, but it also scraps perfectly good, serviceable vehicles, thus lowering supply and driving up used-car prices.
In the U.S., the predicted volume was underestimated, the budget was woefully inadequate, and the government was unable to process payments in a timely manner. Cash for Clunkers quickly became a synonym for government overreach and incompetence.
What surprises me is that Vic is now saying,
In Europe, few question government intervention in industry or hold government accountable. In the U.S., as the tea party has shown, even if government doesnt care about accountability, the citizenry does. And to that I say, Vive la différence!
Whats Vic doing about it? Nothing. Too bad he didnt jump in and speak out when the cash-for-clunkers program was first proposed.
Thanks for nothing, Vic.
wow :|
Europe seems to be in a race to revisit the dark ages.
Every year the "youths" burn up thousands of cars on the streets of French cities. This government program seeks to replace them. That is all.
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