đź“° Auto News Every Chevy Volt has over $250,000 in government subsidies

Primalzer

TCG Elite Member
Sep 14, 2006
25,259
61
The total amount of state and federal subsidies for each Chevy Volt sold is as much as $256,824 per vehicle according to a fiscal analysis by Michigan's Mackinac Center for Public Policy. All for a car that only costs $39,828.

To get to this number analyst James Hohman looked at 18 government programs (rebates, grants, loans, tax credits) and divided that number by the amount of Chevy Volts sold thus far. There's a total of $3 billion in subsidies including $2.3 billion in federal money and $690.4 million offered by the State of Michigan.

Divide into that the 6,000 (or so) Volts sold thus far and you arrive at their number. Or,actually, you arrive at a number closer to $500,000. The math's a little fuzzy.

Of course, this is the largest possible number — because many of these subsidies only max out if the suppliers and companies involved hit their maximum employment/production targets, as they themselves admit:

It's unlikely that all the companies involved in Volt production will ever receive all the $3 billion in incentives, Hohman said, because many of them are linked to meeting various employment and other milestones. But the analysis looks at the total value that has been offered to the Volt in different aspects of production – from the assembly line to the dealerships to the battery manufacturers. Some tax credits and subsidies are offered for periods up to 20 years, though most have a much shorter time frame.

This figure also wouldn't pass an MBA accounting course as it assumes that you're only going to sell 6,000 cars. Ever. It's artificially low because some of these subsidies are 20-year grants. If they sell only 6,000 cars a year for 20 years that number comes down to $25,000 per car.

Boeing spent $10 billion developing the 777. If they only sold ten of those, they spent $1 billion per aircraft. They've actually sold about 1,000 of those, for a price of $10,000,000 per plane thus far. Given the $200 million base price, we'd all agree that's a pretty decent investment.

You can play with the math all day because it's mostly made up and even includes tax breaks, which doesn't involve the government paying money to the company, but merely not collecting taxes from them.

And since this money is being spent trying to speed up our nascent battery production infrastructure — a large portion of the subsidies go to battery suppliers — so it can catch up with the rest of the world it's possible this $3 billion is actually a smart investment in an important future industry.

So, yeah. The maximum price-per-vehicle for a Chevy Volt is $250,000 per vehicle — right now — if you make all the most pessimistic assumptions and the government hands over all their grant/subsidy money to companies who don't meet the goals built into the programs.

:rollpicard:
 

RICH17

Dr. Pussy Slayer, MD
TCG Premium
Nov 14, 2008
26,707
1,992
The 007
Real Name
Adam Rich
The difference is the Prius has been out since 97 and sells like crazy.


The volt doesn't sell for shit


The first Prius didnt sell for shit cause it was new technology, and the first gens were shit. The volt isnt selling here because theyre not bringing them here yet. The first production year they made 30k. The next production year theyre planning on 60k.
 

Fish

From the quiet street
TCG Premium
Aug 3, 2007
40,579
7,992
Hanover Park
Real Name
Fish
sense-robocop-unicorn-weird-demotivational-poster-1251250710.jpg


There are a handful of people on this site that cannot stand GM and try their hardest to highlight GM's every flaw.
 

ef_vtak

Power of Dreams
Mar 25, 2009
476
0
What a horrible article. Here is a made up statistic that is completely irrelevant so get mad! Now I will tell you why it is irrelevant!

The government is actually planning on selling over 600,000 volts by 2015 or 2016 I cant remember the exact year. That number nears little value at that volume.
 

sickmint79

I Drink Your Milkshake
Mar 2, 2008
27,068
16,862
grayslake
i believe to break even (avoiding the opportunity cost of that money we loaned to them and the effort to make all this shit happen) the government needs to hold its current (majority) stake of GM stock for 33/share. IMHO the whole market is overvalued right now. GM is presently trading for 19.90.
 
Old Thread: Hello . There have been no replies in this thread for 90 days.
Content in this thread may no longer be relevant. Consider starting a new thread to get fresh replies.

Thread Info