Americans scrapped 4 million more cars and trucks last year than they purchased, the first significant drop in the U.S. auto fleet in more than four decades, according to a new report.
The United States scrapped 14 million vehicles last year while buying only 10 million new ones, dropping the nation's fleet from an all-time high of 250 million to 246 million, according to the Earth Policy Institute.
Lester Brown, the author of the report, said the drop -- the first significant shrinkage the U.S. fleet has seen since record-keeping began in 1960 -- represents a "cultural shift away from the car" and estimated the fleet size will continue to recede during the next decade. He estimated the fleet could shrink a total of 10 percent by 2020.
The United States scrapped 14 million vehicles last year while buying only 10 million new ones, dropping the nation's fleet from an all-time high of 250 million to 246 million, according to the Earth Policy Institute.
Lester Brown, the author of the report, said the drop -- the first significant shrinkage the U.S. fleet has seen since record-keeping began in 1960 -- represents a "cultural shift away from the car" and estimated the fleet size will continue to recede during the next decade. He estimated the fleet could shrink a total of 10 percent by 2020.
IMHO I think there might be a simpler explanation, though one that TPTB probably would not like which is ...
If you don't have a two full-time-worker household you don't need two cars. Further, you don't need processed foods, daycare, two morning jumbo lattes, and lots of other support services required when both people work. I have looked casually to find how unemployment affects formerly two worker households but I haven't found good stats. It would seem that two income households would have twice the exposure to unemployment as single income households, but looking at even an overview of household income shows lots of complexity. I think it would be very interesting to see how much impact job losses have on two-income households and what that means for various businesses and products that support them.
Ideas?
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