How car finance is holding back a just transition

Q4 Social Sciences IPPR Progressive Review Pub Date : 2024-12-02 DOI:10.1111/newe.12411
Tom Haines-Doran
{"title":"How car finance is holding back a just transition","authors":"Tom Haines-Doran","doi":"10.1111/newe.12411","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Studies on how to decarbonise our transport system usually focus on technical solutions, and economic, social and political barriers. Very few have investigated the relationship between consumer finance and car dependency. This article focusses on how new retail car financing models have deepened car dependency and indebted consumers, to the benefit of a crisis-ridden car industry, and to the detriment of everyone else. It suggests that recognising the importance of car consumption financing is an important step in building the necessary political coalitions to achieve a ‘just transition’.</p><p>Most progressive commentary on transport and the environment recognises that we need to reduce car use, in order to reduce carbon emissions to safer levels and tackle social inequality. Although electric vehicles (EVs) undoubtedly play an important role in a just transition, the wholesale electrification of the car fleet would require enormous energy resources, a wholesale upgrade to the energy grid, and would deplete global lithium supplies. Moreover, the electrification of vehicles has enabled consumers to buy bigger and heavier cars; EVs – whether full EVs or hybrids – make heavier cars cheaper to drive, because electricity is cheaper than petrol or diesel. Maintaining high levels of car ownership and car usage, and allowing vehicles to increase in size, would have a detrimental impact on more vulnerable road users, especially those that, whether by choice or economic necessity, move around much more sustainably by walking and cycling.1</p><p>Recognising many of these factors, governments have made some limited policy decisions to prioritise active travel modes in recent years, whether through segregated bike lanes and ‘low traffic neighbourhoods’, or experiments in pollution charging with clean air zones.2 In many cases, these have generated considerable opposition. While these movements have not necessarily reflected the majority of public opinion, they have been sufficient to reduce the scope of schemes both locally and in terms of national policy.3 This has resulted in ‘culture wars’, seemingly dividing the population with motorists and the car industry on the one side, and environmental crusaders on the other.</p><p>Such patterns reveal the persistence of a strong ‘culture of car dependence’ in society, where support for car use, whether through, for example, tax breaks on consumption or increasing road capacity for cars, is commonsense and is broadly supported. As Mattioli et al argue, explaining the strength of this culture requires a deep understanding of the car industry.4 They show that car manufacturing is characterised by its huge economies of scale and high capital intensity. This gives the car industry considerable political clout. The increased provision of road capacity by politicians, and the travel habits that car owners establish, lead to ‘lock in’ mechanisms that continually reinforce car dependency and its political apologists. But the industry also tends towards overproduction and low profit margins, meaning that manufacturers must continually find ways to expand consumption.</p><p>I worked with Mattioli and his co-authors on the Living Well Within Limits project,5 under the leadership of the ecological economist Julia Steinberger, in 2019. Around that time there was a slew of media reports concerning the personal contract purchase (PCP), which had quickly come to replace hire purchase (HP) as the principal method of financing new car retail transactions in the UK.</p><p>PCPs have become associated with a new kind of car consumption. Under HP financing, consumers repay the balance of the sales price plus interest over a three-or-four-year contract, attaining full ownership at contract expiry. With PCPs, under similar length contracts, consumers only repay around half of the purchase price, but, unlike with HP, do not attain ownership of the vehicle unless they pay an ‘optional lump sum’, which represents the other half of the purchase price.</p><p>This makes the monthly repayment costs for new cars considerably cheaper, allowing consumers access to higher value vehicles (see figure 1, for an illustrated comparison of a PCP and HP deal for a £22,000 car). Rather than pay this lump sum, which most could not afford, the vast majority of consumers choose to instead return the vehicle to the manufacturer without financial penalty, in return for a new car on another PCP deal.</p><p>The rise of PCPs has corresponded with a new short-termism in car consumption. The trade press and newspaper articles have tended to explain these consumption patterns with reference to wider cultures of consumption. A popular referent is throwaway culture associated with mobile phones, in which consumers partake in endless rounds of ‘upgrading’ when they renew their contracts. In other words, PCPs are framed as responding to consumer preferences, rather than shaping them.</p><p>But I was not satisfied with such explanations. Returning to Mattioli et al,7 we know that the car industry has long-term structural problems of overcapacity and low profitability. I wanted to understand how PCPs could have helped manufacturers overcome these problems – to see what the relationship was between the needs of producers and the needs of consumers.8</p><p>The market for new cars in Britain has shown signs of saturation common with other wealthy countries of the global north. Using new car registrations as a proxy, we can see that – abstracting from periods of recession – new car registrations were on the decline in the late 2000s, just as PCPs began to come to prominence (see figure 2, 3).</p><p>Furthermore, as PCPs replaced HP as the primary form of consumer car finance, the average amount financed per car rose 50 per cent, in real terms, between 2009 and 2021 (see figure 3). This represents a huge increase in consumer indebtedness through the consumption of new vehicles.</p><p>The benefits for manufacturers are clear – more consumers spending more money on new cars more frequently helps them overcome their long-term profitability problems. But I was also interested in the potential risks and downsides of this business model. To explore these further, I gained access to credit ratings reports of PCP providers. These are produced by credit ratings agencies, who scrutinise the financial viability of companies who issue debt. PCP loans are originated by special purpose vehicle (SPV) companies that attract bespoke credit ratings, separate from that of their ultimate parent companies, which are often the manufacturers themselves. Gaining a strong, ‘investment grade’ rating is essential to allow providers to attract international financial investment in their car finance SPVs.</p><p>The way it works is that investors buy tranches of ‘securities’, or tradable financial instruments, which derive their value from the repayments of PCP loans for consumers. Much of the work of credit ratings agencies is to estimate the likelihood of consumers defaulting on their PCP loans. These considerations cover a number of variables, including underlying interest rates and the overall state of the economy. Also crucial to these calculations are the stringency of PCP providers’ collections regimes.</p><p>The credit ratings reports I uncovered described these processes in considerable detail. A key component of their stringency is how quickly they move toward repossessing the vehicle in the event of a customer missing a monthly repayment. Indeed, a recent report by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has highlighted the severe impacts of such collection techniques in its investigation into Volkswagen Financial Services’ treatment of vulnerable customers. In one example, a customer, who had not missed a payment for two years, found themselves in a very difficult situation following a mental health breakdown, increased caring responsibilities and financial difficulties. Instead of following procedures recognising the customer's vulnerability, they quickly moved to repossess the vehicle – a situation that could only worsen the customer's personal circumstances, not least because they needed the vehicle to get to work. As the customer recalled, ‘They have not treated me with due courtesy of trying to sort something out just point blank: “now it's terminated”’.11</p><p>The FCA have imposed a fine of £5,397,600 on Volkswagen for breach of financial regulation requirements, relating to 109,589 customers who suffered a detriment as a result of its debt collection practices.12 So far, the FCA has not taken actions against other manufacturers in this way. Yet, these revelations, considered alongside the credit ratings agencies’ reports, and in the context of the car dependency literature, lead to a disturbing conclusion: car dependency is a credit positive for lenders. It ensures that most will prioritise their car finance payments above other life costs – because, to lose one's car could mean losing access to employment, education, healthcare, or other essential activities. This financial leveraging of car dependency is undertaken to keep car manufacturers from having to reckon with the inherent economic contradictions of their own industry.</p><p>This strategy is not without risk. In a situation where wage rises have been sluggish or stagnant, manufacturers cannot simply increase consumer debt in perpetuity. Unless we are to see a sustained increase in real wages, this house of cards must fall. The recent ban on ‘discretionary commission models’ for consumer car finance are part of this story, because they were essentially in place to incentivise brokers to extend as much credit as possible to consumers. The ban, and subsequent legal rulings, may cost car finance companies £16 billion in compensation claims.13</p><p>Increasing default rates is only one of two principal ways PCPs could undermine the financial viability of car manufacturers and the holders of PCP securities in international financial markets. The other is a reduction in used car prices. PCPs are designed to increase the rate of new car purchases. However, today's new vehicles quickly become tomorrow's second-hand vehicles. The increased throughput of new car sales increases the supply of nearly-new vehicles into the used market, which, all other things being equal, should depress the cost of used cars. That is a problem, because manufacturers rely on the vehicles financed under PCP to not depreciate in value below the rate predicted at contract outset. In other words, the ‘PCP solution’ to manufacturers’ profitability problems could, in the long term, undermine itself, quite apart from concerns surrounding consumer default levels.14</p><p>Of course, given the importance of the car industry to the economy, any such increase in sectoral risk also implies a risk to public finances: governments have a tendency to protect sectors, such as the car industry and finance, deemed ‘too big to fail’.</p><p>So, what can be done? Here, it is tempting to argue for ‘better regulation’, especially to protect consumers. But that is a sticking plaster. Manufacturers and their financial backers have a clear material incentive to push consumers into debt, and increased regulation is only likely to make them more innovative in their attempts to do so, as regulation usually trails financial engineering.</p><p>The central problem is a political one: most people need, or perceive to need, to use their cars. A more radical consumer education, which made clear that the motor industry is saving itself by putting its most loyal customers in financial harm's way could help turn the ‘culture war’ on its head. Rather than investments in public transport and cycling infrastructure being framed as a waste of money that could, for example, be diverted to fixing potholes and the next round of motorway widening schemes, they could instead be cast as financial safety nets – public infrastructure that helps us all get around without worrying about how to feed the car industry's insatiable appetite for our hard-earned wages. In turn, this would help build public opposition to the government bailouts that will surely be required if the car industry continues to expand consumer finance.</p><p>Ordinary people are not stupid: they can see the environmental collapse all around them, they understand the fundamentals of global warming, and they perceive that giant corporations often act in ways that only serve their own interests. If a ‘just transition’ is ever to become more than a meme propagated by environmental activists and progressive civil society institutions, and morph into a rallying cry for a movement strong enough to change our political direction, then we need a consumer education that moves beyond individual rights, to one that spells out vested interests and vulnerabilities and empowers the creation of common strategies to overcome them.</p>","PeriodicalId":37420,"journal":{"name":"IPPR Progressive Review","volume":"31 3","pages":"221-227"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-12-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/newe.12411","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"IPPR Progressive Review","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/newe.12411","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"Social Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

Studies on how to decarbonise our transport system usually focus on technical solutions, and economic, social and political barriers. Very few have investigated the relationship between consumer finance and car dependency. This article focusses on how new retail car financing models have deepened car dependency and indebted consumers, to the benefit of a crisis-ridden car industry, and to the detriment of everyone else. It suggests that recognising the importance of car consumption financing is an important step in building the necessary political coalitions to achieve a ‘just transition’.

Most progressive commentary on transport and the environment recognises that we need to reduce car use, in order to reduce carbon emissions to safer levels and tackle social inequality. Although electric vehicles (EVs) undoubtedly play an important role in a just transition, the wholesale electrification of the car fleet would require enormous energy resources, a wholesale upgrade to the energy grid, and would deplete global lithium supplies. Moreover, the electrification of vehicles has enabled consumers to buy bigger and heavier cars; EVs – whether full EVs or hybrids – make heavier cars cheaper to drive, because electricity is cheaper than petrol or diesel. Maintaining high levels of car ownership and car usage, and allowing vehicles to increase in size, would have a detrimental impact on more vulnerable road users, especially those that, whether by choice or economic necessity, move around much more sustainably by walking and cycling.1

Recognising many of these factors, governments have made some limited policy decisions to prioritise active travel modes in recent years, whether through segregated bike lanes and ‘low traffic neighbourhoods’, or experiments in pollution charging with clean air zones.2 In many cases, these have generated considerable opposition. While these movements have not necessarily reflected the majority of public opinion, they have been sufficient to reduce the scope of schemes both locally and in terms of national policy.3 This has resulted in ‘culture wars’, seemingly dividing the population with motorists and the car industry on the one side, and environmental crusaders on the other.

Such patterns reveal the persistence of a strong ‘culture of car dependence’ in society, where support for car use, whether through, for example, tax breaks on consumption or increasing road capacity for cars, is commonsense and is broadly supported. As Mattioli et al argue, explaining the strength of this culture requires a deep understanding of the car industry.4 They show that car manufacturing is characterised by its huge economies of scale and high capital intensity. This gives the car industry considerable political clout. The increased provision of road capacity by politicians, and the travel habits that car owners establish, lead to ‘lock in’ mechanisms that continually reinforce car dependency and its political apologists. But the industry also tends towards overproduction and low profit margins, meaning that manufacturers must continually find ways to expand consumption.

I worked with Mattioli and his co-authors on the Living Well Within Limits project,5 under the leadership of the ecological economist Julia Steinberger, in 2019. Around that time there was a slew of media reports concerning the personal contract purchase (PCP), which had quickly come to replace hire purchase (HP) as the principal method of financing new car retail transactions in the UK.

PCPs have become associated with a new kind of car consumption. Under HP financing, consumers repay the balance of the sales price plus interest over a three-or-four-year contract, attaining full ownership at contract expiry. With PCPs, under similar length contracts, consumers only repay around half of the purchase price, but, unlike with HP, do not attain ownership of the vehicle unless they pay an ‘optional lump sum’, which represents the other half of the purchase price.

This makes the monthly repayment costs for new cars considerably cheaper, allowing consumers access to higher value vehicles (see figure 1, for an illustrated comparison of a PCP and HP deal for a £22,000 car). Rather than pay this lump sum, which most could not afford, the vast majority of consumers choose to instead return the vehicle to the manufacturer without financial penalty, in return for a new car on another PCP deal.

The rise of PCPs has corresponded with a new short-termism in car consumption. The trade press and newspaper articles have tended to explain these consumption patterns with reference to wider cultures of consumption. A popular referent is throwaway culture associated with mobile phones, in which consumers partake in endless rounds of ‘upgrading’ when they renew their contracts. In other words, PCPs are framed as responding to consumer preferences, rather than shaping them.

But I was not satisfied with such explanations. Returning to Mattioli et al,7 we know that the car industry has long-term structural problems of overcapacity and low profitability. I wanted to understand how PCPs could have helped manufacturers overcome these problems – to see what the relationship was between the needs of producers and the needs of consumers.8

The market for new cars in Britain has shown signs of saturation common with other wealthy countries of the global north. Using new car registrations as a proxy, we can see that – abstracting from periods of recession – new car registrations were on the decline in the late 2000s, just as PCPs began to come to prominence (see figure 2, 3).

Furthermore, as PCPs replaced HP as the primary form of consumer car finance, the average amount financed per car rose 50 per cent, in real terms, between 2009 and 2021 (see figure 3). This represents a huge increase in consumer indebtedness through the consumption of new vehicles.

The benefits for manufacturers are clear – more consumers spending more money on new cars more frequently helps them overcome their long-term profitability problems. But I was also interested in the potential risks and downsides of this business model. To explore these further, I gained access to credit ratings reports of PCP providers. These are produced by credit ratings agencies, who scrutinise the financial viability of companies who issue debt. PCP loans are originated by special purpose vehicle (SPV) companies that attract bespoke credit ratings, separate from that of their ultimate parent companies, which are often the manufacturers themselves. Gaining a strong, ‘investment grade’ rating is essential to allow providers to attract international financial investment in their car finance SPVs.

The way it works is that investors buy tranches of ‘securities’, or tradable financial instruments, which derive their value from the repayments of PCP loans for consumers. Much of the work of credit ratings agencies is to estimate the likelihood of consumers defaulting on their PCP loans. These considerations cover a number of variables, including underlying interest rates and the overall state of the economy. Also crucial to these calculations are the stringency of PCP providers’ collections regimes.

The credit ratings reports I uncovered described these processes in considerable detail. A key component of their stringency is how quickly they move toward repossessing the vehicle in the event of a customer missing a monthly repayment. Indeed, a recent report by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has highlighted the severe impacts of such collection techniques in its investigation into Volkswagen Financial Services’ treatment of vulnerable customers. In one example, a customer, who had not missed a payment for two years, found themselves in a very difficult situation following a mental health breakdown, increased caring responsibilities and financial difficulties. Instead of following procedures recognising the customer's vulnerability, they quickly moved to repossess the vehicle – a situation that could only worsen the customer's personal circumstances, not least because they needed the vehicle to get to work. As the customer recalled, ‘They have not treated me with due courtesy of trying to sort something out just point blank: “now it's terminated”’.11

The FCA have imposed a fine of £5,397,600 on Volkswagen for breach of financial regulation requirements, relating to 109,589 customers who suffered a detriment as a result of its debt collection practices.12 So far, the FCA has not taken actions against other manufacturers in this way. Yet, these revelations, considered alongside the credit ratings agencies’ reports, and in the context of the car dependency literature, lead to a disturbing conclusion: car dependency is a credit positive for lenders. It ensures that most will prioritise their car finance payments above other life costs – because, to lose one's car could mean losing access to employment, education, healthcare, or other essential activities. This financial leveraging of car dependency is undertaken to keep car manufacturers from having to reckon with the inherent economic contradictions of their own industry.

This strategy is not without risk. In a situation where wage rises have been sluggish or stagnant, manufacturers cannot simply increase consumer debt in perpetuity. Unless we are to see a sustained increase in real wages, this house of cards must fall. The recent ban on ‘discretionary commission models’ for consumer car finance are part of this story, because they were essentially in place to incentivise brokers to extend as much credit as possible to consumers. The ban, and subsequent legal rulings, may cost car finance companies £16 billion in compensation claims.13

Increasing default rates is only one of two principal ways PCPs could undermine the financial viability of car manufacturers and the holders of PCP securities in international financial markets. The other is a reduction in used car prices. PCPs are designed to increase the rate of new car purchases. However, today's new vehicles quickly become tomorrow's second-hand vehicles. The increased throughput of new car sales increases the supply of nearly-new vehicles into the used market, which, all other things being equal, should depress the cost of used cars. That is a problem, because manufacturers rely on the vehicles financed under PCP to not depreciate in value below the rate predicted at contract outset. In other words, the ‘PCP solution’ to manufacturers’ profitability problems could, in the long term, undermine itself, quite apart from concerns surrounding consumer default levels.14

Of course, given the importance of the car industry to the economy, any such increase in sectoral risk also implies a risk to public finances: governments have a tendency to protect sectors, such as the car industry and finance, deemed ‘too big to fail’.

So, what can be done? Here, it is tempting to argue for ‘better regulation’, especially to protect consumers. But that is a sticking plaster. Manufacturers and their financial backers have a clear material incentive to push consumers into debt, and increased regulation is only likely to make them more innovative in their attempts to do so, as regulation usually trails financial engineering.

The central problem is a political one: most people need, or perceive to need, to use their cars. A more radical consumer education, which made clear that the motor industry is saving itself by putting its most loyal customers in financial harm's way could help turn the ‘culture war’ on its head. Rather than investments in public transport and cycling infrastructure being framed as a waste of money that could, for example, be diverted to fixing potholes and the next round of motorway widening schemes, they could instead be cast as financial safety nets – public infrastructure that helps us all get around without worrying about how to feed the car industry's insatiable appetite for our hard-earned wages. In turn, this would help build public opposition to the government bailouts that will surely be required if the car industry continues to expand consumer finance.

Ordinary people are not stupid: they can see the environmental collapse all around them, they understand the fundamentals of global warming, and they perceive that giant corporations often act in ways that only serve their own interests. If a ‘just transition’ is ever to become more than a meme propagated by environmental activists and progressive civil society institutions, and morph into a rallying cry for a movement strong enough to change our political direction, then we need a consumer education that moves beyond individual rights, to one that spells out vested interests and vulnerabilities and empowers the creation of common strategies to overcome them.

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汽车金融是如何阻碍公平转型的
关于如何使我们的交通系统脱碳的研究通常侧重于技术解决方案,以及经济、社会和政治障碍。很少有人研究消费金融和汽车依赖之间的关系。本文关注的是新的零售汽车融资模式如何加深了消费者对汽车的依赖和负债,对危机缠身的汽车行业有利,对其他人不利。它表明,认识到汽车消费融资的重要性是建立必要的政治联盟以实现“公正过渡”的重要一步。大多数关于交通和环境的进步评论都承认,我们需要减少汽车的使用,以将碳排放减少到更安全的水平,并解决社会不平等问题。尽管电动汽车(ev)无疑在转型过程中发挥着重要作用,但汽车的大规模电气化将需要大量的能源资源,需要对能源网络进行大规模升级,并将耗尽全球锂供应。此外,汽车的电气化使消费者能够购买更大、更重的汽车;电动汽车——无论是纯电动汽车还是混合动力汽车——使重型汽车的驾驶成本更低,因为电力比汽油或柴油便宜。保持高水平的汽车拥有量和汽车使用率,并允许车辆增加规模,将对更脆弱的道路使用者产生有害影响,尤其是那些出于选择或经济需要,更可持续地通过步行和骑自行车出行的人。认识到这些因素,政府近年来做出了一些有限的政策决定,以优先考虑积极的出行方式,无论是通过单独的自行车道和“低交通街区”,还是在清洁空气区进行污染收费的实验在许多情况下,这些都引起了相当大的反对。虽然这些运动不一定反映大多数公众意见,但它们已足以在地方和国家政策方面缩小计划的范围这导致了一场“文化战争”,似乎把人口分成了两派,一方是驾车者和汽车工业,另一方是环保斗士。这种模式揭示了社会中强烈的“汽车依赖文化”的持续存在,在这种社会中,支持汽车使用,无论是通过消费税收减免还是增加汽车的道路容量,都是常识,并得到了广泛支持。正如Mattioli等人所说,解释这种文化的力量需要对汽车工业有深刻的理解它们表明,汽车制造业的特点是巨大的规模经济和高资本密集度。这赋予了汽车行业相当大的政治影响力。政治家提供的道路通行能力的增加,以及车主建立的出行习惯,导致了“锁定”机制,不断强化了对汽车的依赖及其政治辩护者。但该行业也趋向于生产过剩和低利润率,这意味着制造商必须不断寻找扩大消费的方法。2019年,我在生态经济学家朱莉娅·斯坦伯格(Julia Steinberger)的领导下,与马蒂奥利(Mattioli)和他的合著者一起开展了“适度生活”项目。大约在那个时候,有大量媒体报道了个人合同购买(PCP),它很快取代了分期付款购买(HP),成为英国新车零售交易融资的主要方式。pcp已经成为一种新的汽车消费方式。在惠普的融资下,消费者在三年或四年的合同中偿还销售价格加上利息的余额,在合同到期时获得完全所有权。对于pcp,在类似期限的合同下,消费者只偿还大约一半的购买价格,但与惠普不同的是,除非他们支付“可选的一次性付款”,即购买价格的另一半,否则他们不会获得车辆的所有权。这使得新车的每月还款成本大大降低,消费者可以购买更高价值的汽车(见图1,PCP和惠普购买22,000英镑汽车的图解比较)。绝大多数消费者不愿一次性支付这笔绝大多数人负担不起的费用,而是选择将车辆退还给制造商而不受经济处罚,以换取另一笔PCP交易中的新车。pcp的兴起与汽车消费中的一种新的短期主义相对应。商业报刊和报纸文章倾向于参照更广泛的消费文化来解释这些消费模式。一个流行的比喻是与手机相关的一次性文化,在这种文化中,消费者在续签合同时参与了无休止的“升级”。换句话说,pcp的框架是响应消费者的偏好,而不是塑造消费者的偏好。但我对这样的解释并不满意。 另一个是二手车价格的降低。pcp旨在提高新车购买率。然而,今天的新车很快就会变成明天的二手车。新车销量的增加增加了进入二手车市场的近新车的供应量,在其他条件相同的情况下,这应该会降低二手车的成本。这是一个问题,因为制造商依靠PCP融资的车辆的价值不会低于合同开始时预测的贬值率。换句话说,从长远来看,解决制造商盈利问题的“PCP解决方案”可能会损害自身,更不用说对消费者违约水平的担忧了。当然,考虑到汽车工业对经济的重要性,任何此类行业风险的增加也意味着公共财政的风险:政府倾向于保护被认为“太大而不能倒”的行业,如汽车工业和金融业。那么,我们能做些什么呢?在这里,人们很容易主张“更好的监管”,尤其是为了保护消费者。但那只是膏药。制造商及其金融支持者有明显的物质动机迫使消费者负债,而加强监管只可能使他们在这样做的尝试中更具创新性,因为监管通常落后于金融工程。核心问题是一个政治问题:大多数人需要或认为需要使用自己的汽车。更激进的消费者教育可以帮助扭转“文化战争”的局面,让消费者明白,汽车行业是在通过让最忠实的消费者遭受财务损失来拯救自己。对公共交通和自行车基础设施的投资,与其被认为是浪费金钱,比如,这些投资本可以用于修补坑洼和下一轮高速公路拓宽计划,还不如被视为金融安全网——公共基础设施可以帮助我们所有人出行,而不必担心如何满足汽车行业对我们辛苦挣来的工资的贪得无厌的胃口。反过来,这将有助于建立公众对政府救助的反对,如果汽车行业继续扩大消费金融,政府救助肯定是必要的。普通人并不愚蠢:他们可以看到周围环境的崩溃,他们了解全球变暖的基本原理,他们意识到大公司的行为方式往往只服务于他们自己的利益。如果“公正的过渡”不仅仅是环境活动家和进步的公民社会机构传播的模因,而是演变成一场足以改变我们政治方向的运动的战斗口号,那么我们就需要一种超越个人权利的消费者教育,一种阐明既得利益和脆弱性的教育,并授权创造共同的策略来克服它们。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
IPPR Progressive Review
IPPR Progressive Review Social Sciences-Political Science and International Relations
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
43
期刊介绍: The permafrost of no alternatives has cracked; the horizon of political possibilities is expanding. IPPR Progressive Review is a pluralistic space to debate where next for progressives, examine the opportunities and challenges confronting us and ask the big questions facing our politics: transforming a failed economic model, renewing a frayed social contract, building a new relationship with Europe. Publishing the best writing in economics, politics and culture, IPPR Progressive Review explores how we can best build a more equal, humane and prosperous society.
期刊最新文献
Issue Information Decarbonisation pathways for UK transport Disabled people's access needs in transport decarbonisation Transport's role in creating a fairer, healthier country Editorial
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