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Mises Economics Blog

More cash for fewer clunkers

November 18, 2009 9:33 AM by Mark Thornton (Archive)

The CPI rose three tenths of one percent in October and one of the big factors was the rise in used car prices. Used car prices increased 3.4% in October. This is no doubt due to the hundreds of thousands of cars taken off the market and destroyed by the cash for clunkers program. This is good news for those trading in used cars to buy a brand new one, but bad news for those struggling to get basic transportation to get to work.

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Comments (7)

  • Deefburger Deefburger

    No kidding! I have friends who are having to struggle to keep an old car running, with California Smog regs to boot, because they can't afford to go out buy a new(used) car.

    Big help from Big Government. Right.

    Published: November 18, 2009 10:53 AM

  • Deefburger Deefburger

    On top of that, they can't get credit because the banks are sitting on their TARP monies until inflation cures their ballance sheets. Big help once again.

    No loan approval for a new car. No capital (savings) for a used car. House lost in foreclosure.

    SURE the economy is improving. SURE it is. Heck, Wall Street is seeing improvement every day! The recession MUST be over, right?

    Published: November 18, 2009 10:58 AM

  • Miraj Patel Miraj Patel

    Just another unintended side-effect of market intervention... Seems to be growing by the day doesn't it?

    Published: November 18, 2009 1:16 PM

  • Built Into Price Built Into Price

    You give $4500 rebates for cars, and people will just charge $4500 more for cars. You give $8000 rebates for houses, and people will charge $8000 more for houses. You make health insurance (which is not health "care") mandatory, and health insurance companies can charge as much as they want (but probably not more than the opportunity cost of prison).

    Published: November 18, 2009 4:07 PM

  • Shay Shay

    Indeed, that's why the geniuses of the Cash for Clunkers program went one step further, and destoryed all the used cars traded in. That ensures permanent disruption of the used car market.

    Published: November 18, 2009 4:16 PM

  • Gerry Flaychy Gerry Flaychy

    "... bad news for those struggling to get basic transportation to get to work. "_The article
    And bad news too for the taxpayers who will have to furnish the money for this 'no-stimulus-for-the-economy', and for the merchants who would have profit from this taxpayers money.

    Published: November 18, 2009 5:47 PM

  • JB1122 JB1122

    "(but probably not more than the opportunity cost of prison)."

    That's great!

    Published: November 18, 2009 7:51 PM

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