| Click here to view the embedded video. Last week I wrote a pithy little article about my experience driving a Suzuki Cappuccino, a 660 CC kei car, when I was teaching in Japan. I followed the discussion that resulted with some interest and one of my favorite contributors and fellow motorcycle enthusiast, Syke, raised and interesting issue when he wrote: "I'd happily sign whatever paperwork necessary exempting myself (and my heirs) from personal injury lawsuits, or whatever other crap the lawyers can come up with, to own one. The impossibility of getting such cars is just another example of what a country full of cringing wimps we've become." It's something I have thought a lot about over the last few days and to me it comes down to a simple question: Should the government have a role in setting safety standards?
My own understanding of market theory may not be perfect, so this is a chance for TTAC's best and brightest, many of whom may be much more versed on the subject than I, to educate us. As I am a common man, I would imagine that my understanding of market theory is typical so let's use it to begin the discussion and see where it goes from there. In my mind, it goes something like this: If most consumers want safety features in their cars then they will elect not to buy cars that lack those features or will pay an added premium for them. In either case, the manufacturers will recognize that they are losing money on some products and making money on others and react to supply people with the best cars to fit the consumers' desires. The market, then, determines the best way. The problem arises when the government decides to stick its nose into industry's business. The government uses a pool of bureaucrats, many of whom are experts in their respective fields, and when they determine there is a problem, say too many people are dying in car crashes, they create a regulation that mandates industry changes. In the late 50s, for example, the government responded to car crash data by mandating that seatbelts, an early version of which was first patented as far back as 1885, become standard equipment in all cars. By all accounts, most people back then saw little value in seat belts and promptly stuffed into the crack under the seat back so the government then responded with an education campaign and, eventually, laws that mandated seat belt use by a car's occupants. The end result is more tickets, more annoyance and, incidentally, more lives saved. But the government didn't stop there. They mandated other safety regulations, implemented crash tests and have applied so many regulations to the construction of cars that some people see it as a bar to innovation. Today even the cheapest cars have a veritable arsenal of safety devices intended to keep your fragile body from being rent and torn apart by the impacts of a crash. The downside is that the simple, "unsafe" vehicles so many of us remember from the days of our youths, the open dune buggies, the Baja bugs, the two seat roadsters and the stripped down muscle cars are gone. Because of regulation, cars have grown on the outside and offer less interior space, have thicker A pillars that impede our view from the driver's seat and lots of buzzers, whistles and warning lights to electronically bitch us into submission lest we fail to comply with the mandates of safety. My own position is somewhere in the middle. I don't necessarily like being so tightly regulated but if the recent hard economic times have taught me anything it's that I don't trust industry and the market to give a crap about the likes of me and mine when there is a dollar to be made at my expense. I wonder though, are we now, as Syke so eloquently states, "a country full of cringing wimps?" Did we trade away our heritage for safety and security? Does regulation have a place and, if so, how do we strike a balance? I don't have the answers but perhaps you do. I'd like to hear your thoughts. Thomas Kreutzer currently lives in Buffalo, New York with his wife and three children but has spent most of his adult life overseas. He has lived in Japan for 9 years, Jamaica for 2 and spent almost 5 years as a US Merchant Mariner serving primarily in the Pacific. A long time auto and motorcycle enthusiast he has pursued his hobbies whenever possible. He also enjoys writing and public speaking where, according to his wife, his favorite subject is himself. from The Truth About Cars http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com | |||
| | |||
| | |||
|
Monday, July 22, 2013
Mandate Or Market Forces: Are We A Nation Of Cringing Wimps?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Archive
-
▼
2013
(7180)
-
▼
July
(571)
- 2015 Porsche Macan Turbo Spy Photos: Nearly Undisg...
- 2013 Ford Taurus 2.0L EcoBoost Tested: Boost Sure,...
- Ford to Offer Compressed Natural Gas Prep Package ...
- The Seeds Of Enthusiasm
- Editorial: Chrysler Dodges Poison Pen Darts By Del...
- Recall Alert: 2014 Acura MDX
- 2013 Infiniti M35h: Family Checklist
- Greek Gods and Dead Presidents: Why Ford Doesn’t C...
- Chrysler Profit For Q2 Up 16% to $507 Million, Ful...
- Fiat turns higher profit as spending cuts narrow E...
- Chinese Environment Ministry’s Rejection of BMW Fa...
- General Motors Reaches Agreement with Korean Metal...
- PSA Peugeot Citroen Wins EU Approval For 7 Billion...
- Junkyard Find: 1978 Fiat X1/9
- Bark’s Bites: The World’s Fastest Chevrolet Captiv...
- GM Will Debut New Spark In 2015, Delays Aveo Launch
- GM Names Chief Transmission Engineer Interim Head ...
- Chinese Car Dealers Report Inventories Remain High
- Audi's RS7 Hits Six Figures, 60 MPH in 3.7 Seconds
- Why You Shouldn't Complain About Construction Season
- From Magenta to Melon: Our Least Favorite Car Colors
- Ratios Galore: A Deep Look at ZF’s 9-speed Automatic
- Freaky Five-Door: Audi Prices 560-HP 2014 RS7 from...
- There Will Be a Maybach Successor and It Will Be a...
- Name That Exhaust Note, Episode 194
- Autocross: It’s Not Just For Really Lonely Guys In...
- 2015 Lexus GS F Spy Photos: The GS Gets F’d Up
- VW Launches Its Own Car-Net Mobile App on Certain ...
- VW Launches Its Own Car-Net Mobile App on Certain ...
- 2014 Toyota 4Runner Video
- PickupTrucks.com Drives the 2014 Toyota Tundra
- Audi Cutting Distracting Apps from 4G LTE Service,...
- 2014 Chevrolet Impala Video
- The Concept Of Myth, And Why Some Cars Are Cool
- Lotus is Getting a Lifeline, But New Esprit Is On Ice
- BMW i3 Production Version Unveiled, Will Make $ “F...
- GM Axes Global Powertrain Chief & Several Employee...
- French Government Ignored Court Ruling, Invokes EU...
- Ford Engineer Uses OpenXC to Build Haptic Shift In...
- Vellum Venom: 2012 Honda Crosstour
- Mercedes-Benz Is Luxury Car Thieves' Most Wanted
- What's the Most Affordable Midsize Sedan?
- 2013 Chrysler 300: Car Seat Check
- 2014 Toyota 4Runner: First Drive
- Benz is Getting Busy: Outlining the Next Year of S...
- Name That Shifter, No. 139
- Detroit Jury Awards Millions In Malcolm Bricklin F...
- Daimler Not Giving Up On Going After Rolls-Royce a...
- 2013 Nissan Altima Commercial: Dancing with the Ca...
- 2013 BMW X1 xDrive28i Long-Term Test Intro: 40,000...
- Volkswagen Will Bring the Phaeton Back to America—...
- 2014 BMW i3: Bavaria’s Big Electric Gamble
- The Top 10 Smallest Recalls of 2013
- Show Us Your (Shift) Knobs, Win a Save the Manuals...
- Cars.com Reviews the 2013 Nissan Juke
- Where Does Volvo Go From Here?
- Bi-Polar Suzuki Not Sure What To Do With VW
- 2014 BMW i3: First Look
- Recall Alert: 2011 Lotus Evora
- Recall Alert: 2013 Ford C-Max Hybrid
- Total Recall Update: Rustectomy Successful But Cha...
- Capsule Review: 2014 Jeep Grand Cherokee SRT8
- Piston Slap: Inject Fuel Directly into…Oil?
- 2014 Chevrolet Impala: Car Seat Check
- How Often Should You Change the Engine Air Filter?
- Which Seven-Passenger SUV Has the Most Cargo Room?
- Megamos Crypto Is Broken And Your Bentley Is Gonna...
- Coltrane’s Continental
- Practice Patience When Teaching Teens to Drive
- Does the Ford F-150 Have a Pass-Through?
- Chrysler-Roush Gemini Engine, Conceived in Auburn ...
- How to Talk to Teens About Safe Driving
- Do Any New Cars Have Four-Wheel Steering?
- Most-Watched Videos of the Week
- Tips for Teaching Your Teen to Drive
- Which SUV Fits a Tall Driver and Works With a Smal...
- Junkyard Find: 1980 Mazda B2000 Sundowner Pickup
- Despite Inventory Issues in Korea and U.S., Hyunda...
- Jaguar F-Type V8S Costs More Than XKR-S In India
- Review: 2014 Kia Forte (Video)
- 2013 Mercedes-Benz C300 4MATIC Sedan Tested: A Big...
- Corvette C7 FIA GT3 Racer to Be Built by Callaway,...
- Press Releases, Car Seats and Morons
- Alfa Romeo RWD Rumor Only Shows that No Work Has B...
- Wheels Up, Nose Down, While You Rallycrossers Boun...
- Someone’s Building Cayenne Convertibles and They’r...
- GM Quality Director Bullish on CUE, Multimedia Sys...
- The Autonomous Automobile: Can Robot Cars Evolve t...
- COBB-Tuned Ford Focus ST Tested: Consider Us Torn ...
- 2014 Nissan Altima: What's Changed
- Going Tow-to-Tow: 2014 Ram 1500 Pulls Almost Five ...
- Mainstream PHEVs: Fusion Energi and Honda Accord P...
- QOTD: What Are The Best Automotive Details?
- American Sanctions Forced Renault Out Of Iran
- A Tale Of Two Wagons, Part The Second: 1989 Chevro...
- Ride Is Over for Shelby Ford Mustang GT350
- Kia’s Q2 Profits Up To $1.06 Billion On Strong Chi...
- 2013 Mazda MX-5 Miata: Test Car Gallery
- Legally Brunette: Alabama Getaway (From Quotas)
- The Continental: Goodbye to Two Cars, Bosch’s Dies...
-
▼
July
(571)
No comments:
Post a Comment