Business HeadlinesYour Money

Why Buy a Car When You Can Subscribe to One?: Nathaniel Bullard

published Jun 1, 2018 1:00:12 PM, by Nathaniel Bullard
(Bloomberg Opinion) —

Venture capital investor and longtime technology observer Mary Meeker has published her annual Internet Trends presentation — 294 slides this year, including a section on transportation. There’s a useful finding on slide 128: What Americans spend on purchasing vehicles has dropped since the 1970s, while spending on “other transportation,” including public transport and ride hailing, has nearly doubled.

Bloomberg New Energy Finance research published this week suggests that “other transportation” will continue to grow as a share of U.S. transportation spending. Today in the U.S., the average monthly costs of owning, leasing, sharing or subscribing to an automobile service are similar.

In a sense, any form of using a car is a service — the service of moving someone around without expending one’s own energy — but subscriptions, which allow drivers to pay a monthly fee to access a selection of vehicles, go furthest in removing the usual encumbrances of buying or leasing by providing insurance, maintenance and roadside assistance. There’s quite a bit of range in price for subscription services. Ford’s Canvas service starts at $329 a month; the Porsche Passport service starts at $2,000 a month for access to many different models. Both services meet the same need but in different style. Owning a car can be a small or large part of one’s identity; so can the way one subscribes and what they subscribe to.

And it’s not just about personal cars. As Meeker notes, people took more than 7 billion on-demand trips in hailed cars and on bicycles in the first quarter of 2018. China’s on-demand transport, which makes up more than two-thirds of the global market, grew 96 percent year-on-year.

Weekend reading

Tech mogul Jia Yueting, whose empire includes U.S.-based electric-car startup Faraday Future, has been banned from air and train travel in China due to his companies’ mounting debts. New data show people all over the globe don’t understand basic concepts of investment and inflation. A visual history of light captures the “relationship between people and photons that changed the course of mankind.” Software developer Coord’s public-transit routing algorithms for New York City and Washington now include shared bicycle options. From Los Angeles, a hard-boiled plea to preserve and expand shared electric scooter service. Alphabet Inc.’s Waymo unit is expanding its fleet of self-driving minivans by 62,000. SoftBank Group Corp.’s $2.25 billion investment in General Motors Co.’s autonomous-driving operation makes a messy race for self-driving dominance even messier. The Bloomberg Aspen Initiative on Cities and Autonomous Vehicles has developed four possible futures for what autonomous vehicles could mean for urban life. Tim Harford says cheap innovations, including machine learning, are often better than magical ones. Economic development and infrastructure are the top two issues for U.S. mayors, according to an analysis of their speeches. Energy and environment is eighth. A new ranking of cities in the running to host Amazon.com Inc.’s second headquarters puts Raleigh, North Carolina, at No. 1. Rains in the northeastern United States are becoming more intense, and the region’s future will be flooded.

Get Sparklines delivered to your inbox. Sign up here. And subscribe to Bloomberg All Access and get much, much more. You’ll receive our unmatched global news coverage and two in-depth daily newsletters, The Bloomberg Open and The Bloomberg Close.

To contact the author of this story: Nathaniel Bullard at nbullard@bloomberg.net
For more columns from Bloomberg View, visit Bloomberg view
copyright
© 2018 Bloomberg L.P

The Author

Walt Alexander

Walt Alexander

Walt Alexander is the editor-in-chief of Men of Value. Learn more about his vision for the online magazine for American men with the American values—faith, family & freedom—in his Welcome from the Editor.

No Comment

Leave a reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *