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   NMA Blog: Why The Majors Love Mandates <http://blog.motorists.org/>
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Why The Majors Love
Mandates<http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/motoristsblog/~3/fZn2Vjq1PBo/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email>

Posted: 19 Sep 2011 09:11 AM PDT

*[image: Why The Majors Love Mandates]
By Eric Peters, Automotive Columnist*

I’ve written previously about the add-on cost of government-mandated
“safety” equipment such as multiple air bags and (most recently) stability
control, tire pressure monitors and (soon) back-up cameras and (very
possibly) in-car Breathalyzers, too.

It’s hard to pin down the exact per vehicle cost of these things — chiefly
because they’re not listed as individual options but rather folded into the
“base price” of the vehicle — but a reasonable estimate is probably around
$2,500 or so at the point of sale (this naturally includes mark-up).

But the aspect I’ve not written about is the opportunity cost imposed by
these mandates. The stifling effect, in other words, on
what-might-have-been.

And also, the probable fact that the major car companies are happy about
both of these costs — the additional built-in profit-per-car as well as the
stifling effect.

As the nattily dressed hitman in Pulp Fiction put it, allow me to elucidate:

Let’s say you are a bright backyard engineer — maybe even an actual
engineer. You like to design things and one day hit upon the notion that
maybe your design for a new car would be something people might be
interested in. That you could do it better or less expensively or just more
interestingly than the established players in the field.

Sixty-odd years ago, a guy named Preston Tucker had such an idea. So, like
Tucker, you get to working in the garage out back. The project begins to
come together and as word spreads, you discover that yep, there are people
interested in what you’re doing.

Unfortunately, some of those people are employees of the government.

Specifically, the Department of Transportation and the Environmental
Protection Agency. They will swoop in with turgid — and then threatening —
demands that you sell no cars to the public (no matter how much the public
may want those cars) until those cars have complied with every line-item
regulation in their repertoire of regulations and codes. Oh, and not just
that. Even if by some miracle your new car produces less pollution than a
new Prius — even if it is more crashworthy than a new Mercedes S-Class — you
will still be required to demonstrate it to their satisfaction. Which if
you’re not familiar with the way a car company complies with federal ukase
involves (for example) destroying dozens of brand-new cars in various types
of crash tests to placate Uncle Sam’s minions.

And who can afford to destroy a dozen perfectly good brand-new cars? A major
automaker can — but not you.

This one thing alone likely will (and in fact does) constitute a crippling
obstacle that will make it economically impossible for you to sell your new
car to the public. Even if, like the ’48 Tucker, your car is actually more
advanced and innovative than the cars being sold by the majors.

Maybe you’ve figured out a way to cut the weight down to 1,600 pounds by
using a spaceframe and lightweight composites — and so the car gets 80 MPG.
Maybe you found out, after doing some surveys of potential customers, that a
simple, light, fuel-efficient car was very much desired. One that didn’t
come with $2,500 (or more) worth of government-mandated “safety” equipment
but which did cost $2,500 less than a car with those items. So you decided
to try to build it — knowing they (the buyers) would come.

Instead, the government came.

Down. Hard.

First you’d be shut down; probably fined — then possibly jailed. If you
declined to pay the fine or (much worse) had the insolence to continue
building cars the public — vs. the government — actually wanted to buy as
opposed to forcing you to build.

And that is very likely just what the established car companies want — which
is why the established car companies have become such big boosters of
whatever the latest “safety” technology happens to be — and even supine in
the face of potentially crippling mandates (to smaller competitors, anyhow)
such as the recently enacted federal rule that will require all new cars to
average 50-something MPG (while also complying with all the existing federal
ukase that has driven the weight of the average new car up by 500 pounds, on
average) within a few years from now. All without any real concern about
such doesn’t-matters as how much it will end up costing. Because of course,
they aren’t the ones paying the bill.

We are.

Walking arm in arm, the major automakers and their friends in Washington
know they serve one another’s best interests now.

And their interests include keeping you and any other subversive tinkerer
off the field. They want the market cornered.

And you, too.

Once you grasp the nature of this symbiotic relationship you will understand
why there hasn’t been a single successful new car company (outside of
politically correct and wholly government-subsidized efforts such as Tesla
Motors, producer of the $100k electric Edsel) in decades — and a winnowing
of the previously existing herd down to a handful of enormous cartels that
are (drum roll, please) “too big too fail.”

These cartels enjoy a direct line (via the police power of the state) to
your wallet and mine — directly and indirectly. They also enjoy protection —
from competition, especially.

It’s part of the reason why they (the cars) all look just the same, mostly
drive just the same — and force-feed you the same “features,” too. Because
there’s no legal alternative, no third option. It’s Tweedledee or
Tweedledum. In politics and cars.

Independents need not apply.

Comments?
www.epautos.com

*Are You A NMA Member?* If not, read about *the
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Why The Majors Love
Mandates<http://blog.motorists.org/why-the-majors-love-mandates/>

Further Reading:

   - Economy Car Catch 22 <http://blog.motorists.org/economy-car-catch-22/>
   - GM’s $4,000 Car That We Won’t
Get<http://blog.motorists.org/gm-4000-dollar-car-we-will-not-get/>
   - The Return of the Blue Light
Special<http://blog.motorists.org/the-return-of-the-blue-light-special/>
   - If We Really Wanted To Save
Gas…<http://blog.motorists.org/if-we-really-wanted-to-save-gas/>
   - When A Good Crash Test Score Really Isn’t So
Great<http://blog.motorists.org/when-a-good-crash-test-score-really-isnt-so-great/>

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