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- Newsgroups: seattle.general
- Path: sparky!uunet!nwnexus!beauty!josh
- From: josh@Happy-Man.com (Joshua_Putnam)
- Subject: Re: Transit system in Seattle (Re: Following distance Was (Re: Why CAN'T people drive 55?!))
- Message-ID: <1993Jan27.220641.6436@Happy-Man.com>
- Reply-To: Joshua_Putnam@happy-man.com
- Organization: Happy Man Corp., Vashon Island, WA 98070-7399
- References: <josh.727643608@pogo> <1993Jan22.205122.14187@ssc.com> <1993Jan27.002603.11066@fnx.uucp> <1k6grbINNd8s@shelley.u.washington.edu>
- Date: Wed, 27 Jan 1993 22:06:41 GMT
- Lines: 121
-
- In <1k6grbINNd8s@shelley.u.washington.edu> monaghan@cac.washington.edu (Tracy Monaghan ) writes:
-
- >According to Metro, including the $.10 fare increase next month, the
- >average cost to the rider for riding Metro is $.12 per mile.
-
- >According to AAA, the aversge cost for operating a car is $.35 per mile.
-
- The frequently-cited cost per mile of driving, prepared by the
- Motor Vehicle Manufacturer's Association, has risen sharply in
- recent years, from 27.2 cents in 1985 to 41.0 cents in 1990.
- Interestingly, variable costs (gas, oil, maintenance, and tires)
- have remained relatively stable, rising from 8.04 cents to 8.40
- cents per mile. Fixed costs, meanwhile, have risen from $2,441/yr
- over the ownership period to $3,256, despite an increase in the
- projected ownership period to six years and 60,000 miles.
-
- Of the fixed costs included in the MVMA cost per mile, depreciation
- is by far the largest, rising from $1,253 in 1985 to $2,357 in
- 1990. Insurance rose from $503 to $675; license and registration,
- from $115 to $165; and finance charges from $570 to $680.
-
- In applying these costs to the real world, it's important to
- remember that they are costs *for new vehicles.* Only 31% of new
- cars sold are bought by households with incomes under $35,000
- (1990), even though such households make up 57.9% of the U.S.
- population.
-
- The cost calculations also assume households dispose of the new car
- after 6 years / 60,000 miles, even though the *average* age of cars
- in use in 1990 was 7.8 years. Over 20% of cars in use were 12 or
- more years old.
-
- For the MVMA, these assumptions make sense -- after all,
- manufacturers care mostly about the sales and costs of new cars. In
- computing the actual cost of commuting by car, however, the MVMA
- assumptions are questionable. Depreciation is heavily weighted
- towards the first few years of a car's life. Extending the holding
- period from 6 years to 8 reduces the cost per mile significantly
- for new cars, but an even more substantial reduction in
- depreciation expense is achieved by purchasing used cars.
-
- Thanks to their lower purchase price, used cars also have lower
- finance costs, registration fees, and insurance. For many older
- cars, insurance costs drop more when owners opt out of
- comprehensive coverage. Finance cost is zero if the car
- is cheap enough to pay cash instead of borrowing.
-
- Older cars do have a disadvantage in fuel economy. The sharpest
- drop is found in cars from before the fuel crises of the 1970s. Of
- cars in use in 1988, those from 1976 or earlier achieved an average
- of 12.3 mpg, vs. 22.1 mpg for 1988-9 model years. Cars from
- 1981-2, however, were nearly as efficient as those from 1988-9,
- averaging 20.7 mpg. At a gas cost of $1.10 per gallon, this
- equates to 8.9 cents per mile for 1976 and older, 5.3 cents per
- mile for 1981-2, and 5.0 cents for 1988-9. Thus, while the buyer
- of a used car would probably get poorer fuel economy, this is an
- insignificant 0.3 cents of the purported cost per mile.
-
- The real cost of commuting in a used car is likely to be much lower
- than the MVMA's new-car cost estimate. Basing transit plans on the
- MVMA estimate is therefore inappropriate unless the transit in
- question is aimed primarily at upper-income commuters driving cars
- which they purchased new and which they intend to replace at 6 years /
- 60,000 miles.
-
- At an anecdotal level, I maintain a spreadsheet covering all the
- costs I incur in using and maintaining my own car, a 1965 Ford
- Country Sedan. The costs include a complete engine rebuild, tires,
- washing, fluids, belts, paint, a replacement gas tank and fuel
- sender, tuneups, stereo, lights, weatherstripping, brake shoes,
- etc. Also, since I have no way to reliably estimate the car's
- life, I wrote off its entire purchase price the day I bought it
- used. Despite including all these costs, and despite a piggish 12
- mpg average fuel economy (down from 13 mpg because of the
- introduction of oxygenated fuels), my cost per mile is under 14
- cents. If the MVMA estimate of variable costs, 8.4 cents per mile
- in 1990, is correct, it will make economic sense to replace my car
- with a new one if the total fixed costs of a new car drop below 5.6
- cents per mile, or $5,600 fixed costs for a car with a life span of
- 100,000 miles. If you can sell me a new car for $5,600 with operating
- costs under 8.4 cents per mile, you're in the wrong line of work.
-
- My commute is about 15 miles round trip, under 4,000 miles per
- year. If I commuted by car, my current car would cost me about
- $560. An MVMA car would cost me over $1,600. For a mass-transit
- system to be economically attractive, it would have to cost me no
- more than $46 per month, plus the value of whatever time it added
- to my commute. A transit plan relying on the MVMA estimate would
- claim a breakeven cost of $133 per month, and transit advocates
- would rail against my irrationality if I declined to patronise a
- system costing me "only" $100 per month, about twice my cost of
- commuting by car.
-
- The bicycle I actually commute on cost under $800 new, including
- all commuting accessories. It could easily last a year with no
- maintenance besides oiling the chain and patching a flat every few
- months. Treating it as a disposable good, then, it would cost me
- half as much as an MVMA car, and only a few hundered dollars more
- than my 1965 Ford. Based on my past experience, however, I'd
- expect a life span of more than 5 years with significant
- maintenance, making it much less expensive than my used car.
-
- Despite the very low cost of bicycle commuting, I do not expect
- everyone else to take it up. Were I not the type of person who
- enjoys it, $150 would not be enough to make me ride in the dark,
- blowing rain and snow of November, December, and January. If I
- were a consultant on call to various locations, the added travel
- time would certainly outweigh the savings. If I lived or worked in
- a high-crime area, the vulnerability of cycling would outweigh both
- the health and the economic concerns. At the moment I'm recovering
- from two broken arms and a broken wrist, so cycling is out of the
- question.
-
- I certainly encourage people to look at alternatives to car
- commuting, whether mass transit or bicycling, but I recognize that
- driving is a reasonable economic choice for many people.
- --
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