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![]() | Fixing Detroit: How Far, How Fast, How Fuel Efficient?Published 2009-06-22 11:16By University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute |


A New University of
According to the report, "Fixing
Modeling the impact of increased fuel economy standards, the study finds that an industry-wide mandated increase in fuel economy of 30 percent to 50 percent (35 miles per gallon to 40.4 mpg) would increase
"Our findings support rapid, wide-reaching change in business models," said
"For years it has discounted consumer research results when calculating the benefits of improving fuel economy, often by as much as two thirds," he said. "If GM had followed its own market research results over the last three decades, they would not be in Chapter 11 today."
Findings
Speed & Scope
The report analyzes extensive literature on the successful turnaround of six international companies of comparable size, diversity and distress to the domestic automobile industry. Research revealed universal approaches critical to success:
-- Implement Broad, Deep, Fast Change: All successful efforts addressed the
fundamental issues that drove them into crisis and they did it as fast
as possible.
-- Replace Management Team: In addition to changes in strategy and
structure, in all cases there were widespread changes in management.
-- Transform Culture: All of the successful companies considered changing
culture a critical requirement and made it a top priority for success.
-- Build a Portfolio of Excellent Products: The path to long-term financial
health of any company rests on having a great product portfolio. Our
domestic auto industry, in its modern incarnation, has never been able
to execute an excellent portfolio, only isolated successes.
Fuel Economy
The report models the impact of three different fuel economy standard increases -- 30 percent (35 mpg), 40 percent (37.7 mpg) and 50 percent (40.4 mpg) -- on the profitability and sales of the industry and separately for the
Modeling results include:
-- The Detroit 3 gain profits over base in all scenarios, with the largest
profits gained from pursuing more aggressive fuel economy.
-- Japanese automakers' profit gains are smaller than the Detroit 3,
with the smallest profits gained from pursuing a 50 percent increase
(40.4 mpg) in fuel economy.
-- At a 50 percent increase, the Japanese industry loses sales while the
domestic industry continues to gain in sales and profitability -- a
result driven by the different starting points.
The value given to fuel economy by automakers has critical impact moving forward. According to the report:
-- There is compelling evidence that the Detroit 3 have systematically
underestimated the value of fuel economy to customers.
-- Because Detroit 3 automakers have long underestimated the consumer value
of fuel economy, raising fuel economy standards will not cost more than
consumers would be willing to pay.
-- In every scenario, the average cost per vehicle (direct plus indirect)
is less than what consumers would be willing to pay.
In a sensitivity analysis conducted on inputs to the model, the report finds:
-- The chance that increased profits could exceed $6 billion is 18 percent
for a 50 percent increase (40.4 mpg) in fuel economy, but only 6 percent
for a 30 percent increase (35 mpg).
-- There is a 7 percent chance that profits would be less than zero if fuel
economy standards were increased to 35 mpg, and a 15 percent chance of
profit loss if standards were increased to 40.4 mpg.
-- Three of the factors had extreme values capable of generating a drop in
Detroit 3 profits: a gasoline price of $1.50 per gallon (a price not
seen since 1999); extremely low consumer response to fuel costs relative
to vehicle prices; and direct manufacturing costs (materials and labor)
that are more than twice the estimates used by McManus and Kleinbaum and
three-to-four times National Research Council estimates (adjusted for
inflation).
The new report builds on studies published by UMTRI beginning in 2005 predicting that the three biggest domestic automakers stood to lose billions in profits and thousands of jobs in the event of an oil spike -- a prediction borne out as Hurricane Katrina and tensions around the world sent prices skyward. The studies documented the financial risks to
By the time gasoline prices spiked to more than
TO ACCESS THE REPORT: http://www.umtri.umich.edu
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