Vehicle scrappage incentives to accelerate the replacement decision of heterogeneous consumers |
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Affiliation: | 1. GERAD and HEC Montreal, Canada;2. Chair in Game Theory and Management, GERAD, HEC Montreal, 3000 Côte-Sainte-Catherine, Montreal H3T 2A7, Canada |
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Abstract: | Vehicle scrappage subsidy programs have been widely applied by governments to replace old cars by newer, more fuel-efficient ones. While these programs have been implemented to provide motivation for replacing vehicles earlier, they may not be as effective as expected. From a cost-benefit perspective, the consumers who would have replaced anyway, even without the program, must be considered when evaluating the net benefits of the program. This requires accounting for variations in consumers’ willingness to replace. Considering consumer heterogeneity in net trade-in valuation, this study investigates a dynamic vehicle-replacement problem based on a life cycle optimization (LCO) approach. We theoretically demonstrate that although increasing the subsidy level does motivate low-value consumers to replace earlier, it also induces consumers with a high net trade-in valuation to replace later in order to become eligible for the subsidy program. We have also developed a simulation program based on real data, to demonstrate the application of our general model. According to the simulation results, ignoring consumer heterogeneity could result in an overestimation of the net benefits of the scrappage program. |
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