ddrueding said:
Considering that transportation to distant and remote areas are a vital part of my business, it's worth it.
Quite a large percantage of the world isn't subway-accessible
OK, you have a business requiring car travel and that may well make the car pay for itself. The vast majority of people don't, and make a choice to live somewhere not subway-accessible.
Combining point #1 with universal truth #1 (people are stupid). The neighborhood I live in has a household income of about $40-60k/year. Why, then, are there $50k+ SUVs that get single-digit fuel efficiency? The only conclusion I can come to is that gas doesn't cost enough. Of course, a gas-guzzler tax that kicked in at 20mpg would do nicely, but it's easier to let a pipeline get bombed (hello secret service)*.
I agree gas doesn't cost enough but I don't base that conclusion on the fact that people spend a ridiculous portion of their incomes on their cars. Rather, I base it on the fact that burning gas causes all sorts of problems which cost society so the end user should pay more to burn the gas.
As for why people spend so much on cars, yes, they are stupid. They don't buy vehicles which reflect what they need on a daily basis but rather buy what misleading advertising leads them to believe they need. To buy groceries and commute to work a little EV would be fine for most people. They don't need a big SUV which can drive up the side of a glacier or tow 18,000 pounds or get to 60 in 8 seconds. Think of it this way-do these people also need to own a moving truck in case they move? No, rather they rent one if/when they need it. So why own a vehicle with capabilities you'll seldom if ever use? Rather, for those rare times you need to move more load, or the range of your vehicle is insufficient, just rent an appropriate vehicle. And if you only drive once a week or less, maybe its a better idea to just rent a car when you need it instead of owning one. Problem is the car has a status second only to the family dog so people are completely illogical when it comes to them. Do I own a subway train for the 20 or 30 times a year a might use one?
My point isn't that nobody should own a car but rather why don't enough people demand cars suited to what they really need them for instead of letting themselves be mislead by advertising? For the vast majority a little $5000 EV would be fine. It could get them to work, buy groceries, pick up the kids at soccer practice, even be suited to 150 mile trips. You'll be paying very little per mile for "fuel" compared to a gas car. You'll also be paying practically nothing on maintenance. Such a vehicle could approach a total cost of ownership approaching the $0.05 a mile I mentioned earlier, especially if auto users demanded an end to mandatory auto insurance (another collossal expense). In short, it annoys me that if I were ever in the market for a vehicle I can't get the type of vehicle best suited to my needs, but rather need to pay extra for a lot of features I don't want or need (extra size, range, power, radio/CD players, AC, heat, air bags, etc), and would be forced to pay something like $3K a year for insurance (again don't need it since I would never cause an accident). No quicker road to tyranny than forcing someone to pay for something you
think they should have.
BTW, you'll get your $150 per barrel crude soon enough with increased demand from China and India. Additionally, the Iran situation has all the makings of causing a permanent reduction in our ability to buy Middle Eastern oil, driving up the price yet more. My guess is in ten years we see GM, Ford, and Chrysler close their doors for good with the influx of cheap Chinese EVs. This will be exactly what people will be demanding as oil edges ever higher, yet GM et al will have bet the farm on SUVs and high-performance sedans, all powered by ICEs of course. It might be time to start short-selling US automaker stock soon.