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Finally, Too Many Cars
By Carl Abbott History News Service
Rushing to beat a deadline, General Motors and Chrysler last Tuesday afternoon
filed required restructuring plans with federal officials. Chrysler wants $5
billion more in federal loans to stay afloat. GM needs another $9.1 billion now,
with more requests likely down the road.
The short-term question of whether the two auto giants warrant a bailout or
bankruptcy sidesteps the deeper reality: Americans finally have enough cars.
The precipitous plunge in auto sales over the last year was caused
principally by spiking gasoline prices, tight credit and disappearing paychecks.
But a deeper look shows that we've reached the end of the automobile century.
Like other successful 20th-century technologies such as telephones and
television, the growth of registered automobiles long outpaced the growth of
American population. The industry brought jobs to Detroit and Kenosha and
eventually to Spring Hill, Tenn.
Our memory of the Model-T era, which ran from 1908 to 1927, may be hazy, but
those were the years when automobiles began to change from a toy to the
necessity of the present day.
The first nationwide auto registration statistics date from the early 1920s.
Unlike the shrinking corporations of today, these were the boom years when
General Motors was preparing to move its headquarters from Flint to Detroit, and
Walter Chrysler was starting to remake Maxwell Motors into his future Big Three
company. In 1922, there was one registered passenger car or truck for every nine
Americans. The country was well on the way to the twenty-first century reality
of a car (or two) in every driveway.
From Keystone Cops comedies to contemporary movie chases to sophisticated
art, American culture quickly absorbed the automobile. Take this example: 1922
was also the year that Sinclair Lewis published his satirical novel about George
F. Babbitt, a businessman in the fictional city of Zenith. In ways that would
resonate with many car owners today, Babbitt treasured his car: "To George F.
Babbitt, as to most prosperous citizens of Zenith, his motor car was poetry and
tragedy, love and heroism. The office was his pirate ship but the car his
perilous excursion ashore."
The United States reached an automotive milestone in 1968. Amid the turmoil
of war, riots and assassinations, few people noticed that the year ended with
100,546,000 automobiles and trucks for 199,399,000 resident Americans. One-car
families had become two-car and three-car families, with the upshot that every
child, woman and man in the country could ride in the front seat at the same
time. Two years later, the 1970 census reported the closely connected fact that
more Americans lived in automobile-dependent suburbs than in central cities. The
pattern of auto-dependent living that the majority of Americans still enjoy was
firmly set.
The numbers for the 21st century are even more startling. For 2006 (the last
year with complete statistics) the census estimates that there were 225,087,000
Americans aged 18 or older. At their disposal were 234,525,000 passenger cars,
SUVs and light trucks, not to mention 8,819,000 heavy trucks.
Every adult American can now sit behind a steering wheel at the same time and
still leave another 20 million vehicles sitting idle in driveways and parking
lots.
In short, we have enough cars.
We will need to keep producing and buying new trucks and cars to retire
reeking beaters, replace cars that wear out and swap older, inefficient vehicles
for ones that use less fuel per mile. However, the market is essentially
saturated (or "mature," if that sounds better). Cars are in the same category as
refrigerators and land-line telephones. After a century, Americans are no longer
adopting automobiles as a new technology. We're simply maintaining the status
quo until something better comes along.
Some sort of American automobile industry will survive the bailout debate,
but it will never be the economic powerhouse it was in the last century.
Carl Abbott is a professor of urban studies and planning at Portland State
University, ore., and a writer for the History News Service.
History News Service
Co-Directors:
Joyce Appleby: appleby@history.ucla.edu
Telephone: 310-470-8946
James M. Banner, Jr.: jbanner@aya.yale.edu
Telephone: 202-462-5655
Website designed and administered by Christopher
Bates.
This article was posted on February 18, 2009.
Pictured at top (left to right): King George III
of England, Harriet Beecher Stowe, "Surrender at
Appomattox", Albert Schweitzer, The sinking of the U.S.S.
Arizona at Pearl Harbor, Bill Clinton.
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