National Post

Honk for the mass-produced car

- Randal O’TOOle Randal O’Toole is a senior fellow with the Cato Institute and author of “Gridlock: Why We’re Stuck in Traffic and What to Do About It.”

Monday, Oct. 7, marked the 100th anniversar­y of the opening of Henry Ford’s moving assembly line for producing the Model T. This innovative production system allowed Ford to double worker pay while cutting the price of his cars in half, making it possible, for the first time, for auto workers to buy the cars they built.

Time magazine lists the Model T among its “50 worst cars of all time” because “the consequenc­es of putting every living soul on gas-powered wheels” were (supposedly) so negative. The Obama administra­tion seems to agree with that bleak summation. Its recent strategic plan for the department of Transporta­tion focuses exclusivel­y on such negative consequenc­es, which allegedly include the high dollar cost of driving, poorly designed cities, greenhouse gases and obesity. The “Livable communitie­s” section of the plan, for instance, says that Americans drive too much because cities are designed to make us “auto dependent,” and the plan’s goal is to rebuild cities to induce people to drive less.

In fact, many of the supposed negative costs of cars are purely imaginary, while others are rapidly declining. each year’s crop of new cars is safer, more fuel-efficient and less polluting than before. department of energy data show that in 1970 cars used twice as much energy per passenger mile as did mass transit. Today, they are practicall­y tied, and in a few years driving will use less energy and emit less pollution than public transit.

For more than 60 years, Americans have consistent­ly spent around 9% of their personal incomes on driving, even though per-capita miles have tripled since 1950. According to data from the bureau of Transporta­tion Statistics —counting both user costs and subsidies — public transporta­tion costs nearly four times as much per passenger mile as driving, while Amtrak costs well over twice as much.

The costs of driving are overwhelme­d by the benefits of mass-produced automobile­s, benefits largely ignored by the Obama administra­tion and various antiauto groups. Ford democratiz­ed mobility: Today, 91% of American households have at least one car, and 96% of commuters live in a household with at least one car. curiously, census bureau statistics indicate that more than 20% of commuters who live in carless households still get to work by driving alone (apparently in borrowed cars).

by tripling urban travel speeds, autos gave workers access to better jobs and employers access to a wider pool of workers, contributi­ng to a huge increase in worker productivi­ty. Per-capita GdP has increased by nearly nine times in the last century, and autos are responsibl­e for a large share of that increase.

Automobile­s relieved people of the

20% of commuters who live in carless households still get to work by driving alone

need to live in cramped tenements that were within walking distance of their jobs. by giving workers access to cheap, unregulate­d land at the urban periphery, cars contribute­d to a 50% rise in home ownership rates since 1940. cars also gave everyone access to a huge variety of low-cost consumer goods. In 1913, the average grocery store had fewer than 500 products for sale; today, the average is more than 20,000. Without cars, modern retailers from Krogers to Whole Foods, Wal-Mart to costco, and Tru-Value to restoratio­n Hardware simply could not exist.

cars were an essential ingredient in both the civil rights and women’s rights movements. The Montgomery bus boycott succeeded because enough blacks owned cars that they could share rides to work with former bus riders. Women’s rights became a certainty when enough families owned two cars so that both spouses could drive to work.

Although cars are often blamed for urban sprawl, in fact they have preserved far more productive farm and forest land than urban areas have consumed. before cars, trucks and tractors replaced animal power, farmers devoted close to a third of their land to relatively unproducti­ve pasture. Since 1913, close to 200 million acres of that pasture has been converted to productive crop or forest land. by comparison, all the lowdensity suburbs in America occupy well under 100 million acres.

Mass-produced automobile­s gave low- and moderate-income people access to forms of recreation previously available only to the rich. For example, in 1912, fewer than one out of 4,000 Americans visited yellowston­e Park; last year, it was more than one out of 100. Autos greatly contribute­d to human health and safety. Thanks to paved streets and automotive technology, fire department­s and paramedics save hundreds of thousands of homes and thousands of lives each year.

When Hurricane Katrina struck the Gulf coast in 2005, New Orleans had the second-lowest per-capita auto ownership of any major city in America. As documented in news reports at the time, a result of the immobility was tragedy as hundreds of people died and tens of thousands were stuck in the city. When Hurricane rita hit Houston a few weeks later, autos allowed four million people to evacuate with almost no casualties.

Personally, I hate to be behind the wheel of a car and look forward to driverless cars. but as an economist, I realize that the mass-produced auto is one of the greatest inventions in history. Instead of trying to reduce driving, we should encourage it while continuing to make it safer, cleaner and more energy efficient.

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