A Post-Car Society
A gadget-crazy people show no interest in new cars, dismiss the four-wheeled horse as 'so 20th century.'
Large, powerful cars have always symbolized the good life. But now there's a contrarian philosophy of smaller, lighter, cheaper. Inside the colorful history of the small car.Quiz: A Green Autopia
From Detroit to Tokyo, the trend is toward more fuel-efficient cars. Test your auto body of knowledge with our quiz on green wheels.
Kimiyuki Suda should be a perfect customer for Japan's carmakers. He's a young (34), successful executive at an Internet-services company in Tokyo and has plenty of disposable income. He used to own Toyota's Hilux Surf, a sport utility vehicle. But now he uses mostly subways and trains. "It's not inconvenient at all," he says. Besides, "having a car is so 20th century."
Suda reflects a worrisome trend in Japan; the automobile is losing its emotional appeal, particularly among the young, who prefer to spend their money on the latest electronic gadgets. While minicars and luxury foreign brands are still popular, everything in between is slipping. Last year sales fell 6.7 percent—7.6 percent if you don't count the minicar market. There have been larger one-year drops in other nations: sales in Germany fell 9 percent in 2007 thanks to a tax hike. But analysts say Japan is unique in that sales have been eroding steadily over time. Since 1990, yearly new-car sales have fallen from 7.8 million to 5.4 million units in 2007.
Alarmed by this state of decay, the Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association launched a comprehensive study of the market in 2006. It found a widening wealth gap, demographic changes—fewer households with children, a growing urban population—and general lack of interest in cars led Japanese to hold their vehicles longer, replace their cars with smaller ones or give up car ownership altogether. "Japan's automobile society stands at a crossroads," says Ryuichi Kitamura, a transport expert and professor at Kyoto University. He says he does not expect the trend to be reversed, as studies show that the younger Japanese consumers are, the less interested they are in having a car. JAMA predicts a further sales decline of 1.2 percent in 2008. Some analysts believe that if the trend continues for much longer, further consolidation in the automotive sector (already under competitive pressure) is likely.
Japanese demographics have something to do with the problem. The country's urban population has grown by nearly 20 percent since 1990, and most city dwellers use mass transit (the country's system is one of the best developed in the world) on a daily basis, making it less essential to own a car. Experts say Europe, where the car market is also quite mature, may be in for a similar shift.
But in Japan, the "demotorization" process, or kuruma banare, is also driven by cost factors. Owning and driving a car can cost up to $500 per month in Japan, including parking fees, car insurance, toll roads and various taxes. Taxes on a $17,000 car in Japan are 4.1 times higher than in the United States, 1.7 times higher than in Germany and 1.25 times higher than in the U.K., according to JAMA. "Automobiles used to represent a symbol of our status, a Western, modern lifestyle that we aspired for," says Kitamura. For today's young people, he argues, "such thinking is completely gone."
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Member Comments
Posted By: jtate @ 03/15/2008 12:45:35 PM
Comment: I live in a VERY car-oriented, sprawling American city, where public transportation ranges from abysmal to non-existent and a suburban existence can mean it can be 2 or 3 miles to even the nearest supermarket and perhaps 15 or 20 miles to an average office. So as far as it goes, this is a place where people depend on and live in their cars.
All that said, I made a conscious decision to live and work downtown and learn how to use what little public transit there is. It wasn't easy, and I REALLY had to examine my priorities, but I am car-free! I walk to work and pretty much everywhere else I need. I LOVE LOVE LOVE it! For any sacrifices I may have made (my smallish apartment and lack of a backyard, for example) I have gained so much in lifestyle and would never give it up! I happily describe myself as "car-free"!
The most interesting thing would probably be people's reactions to my car-free choices.
The older generation tends to be skeptical and assume I just can't afford a car, and would move to the suburbs if only I made more money. (This is not the case, I make plenty of money to afford a car and a suburban mcmansion. I just don't want one.) Or they assume that my life must be terribly inconvenient. (also not true!)
The young - the lower end of gen X and the millennials - tend to be envious! Once they overcome initial surprise, they immediately start to fantasize about a world free of parking tickets and rising insurance rates and dishonest mechanics, the benefits for the planet are there as a consideration but almost an afterthought. They immediately see the joys of walking out the door of my apartment to my choice of restaurants and a supermarket only 6 blocks away, and mere blocks from local pubs. Think of a life without even the *chance* of a DUI!
Lots of young people can't make the choices I have, and are stuck in the 'burbs, but the values and ideals are changing. We dream of a post-car society, too.
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