Curbing Cars, The Chinese Way – A Solution To Flagging Sales?

Bertel Schmitt
by Bertel Schmitt

I am coming back to China after having been away for months. My trusted sidekick of many years, a lady surnamed Zhang, seeks my advice. “Bertel, we have car problems.” Uh-oh, I think, and I mentally do a review of my accounts. This smells expensive. As it turns out, the problem is bigger than what money can solve.

Ms. Zhang explains that her mother won the lottery. The Beijing license plate lottery.


“Now my mum needs to buy a car real soon, otherwise the win is forfeited.”

Ok, so buy a car, I say.

“But we already have two, and my mother does not enjoy driving.”

Ms. Zhang the elder could not resist entering the lottery though.

As the world knows, Beijing has enacted a lottery system to curb the number of cars on Beijing’s roads. That system seems to have the opposite effect.

Get rid of the oldest car and buy a new one, I suggest.

“That doesn’t solve the problem. I can keep the license plate of the old one when I sell it. We now have three plates. What shall I do?”

How about someone in the family, I suggest. Chinese are big on family.

“They don’t want it, they all have a car. Some have two.”

Ms. Zhang then relates to me the story of a lucky member of the extended family who came into two more license plates than he needs. “He bought two extra cars just to keep the plates. The cars sit in his garage.”

How about simply forgetting the whole thing? She already has two cars, does not want three, to hell with the extra license plate.

“But that plate is very valuable. Very hard to get.” Ms. Zhang is deeply conflicted.

If it’s so valuable, then sell the plate, I say. This is China, everything has its price.

“Cannot. Plate not transferrable,” says Ms Zhang. And there is an even bigger problem:

“After winning the lottery, if you don’t buy a car, you may never ever enter the lottery again.”

For the first time, I am out of good advice. I muse that when I came to China first in 2004, people were poor, nobody had a car, the highways were empty, and now, not even 10 years later …

Maybe that’s the solution to revive flagging car sales in Europe, and to bring America back to the 17 million heydays: Limit the cars people can have. Then, everybody will want three.

Bertel Schmitt
Bertel Schmitt

Bertel Schmitt comes back to journalism after taking a 35 year break in advertising and marketing. He ran and owned advertising agencies in Duesseldorf, Germany, and New York City. Volkswagen A.G. was Bertel's most important corporate account. Schmitt's advertising and marketing career touched many corners of the industry with a special focus on automotive products and services. Since 2004, he lives in Japan and China with his wife <a href="http://www.tomokoandbertel.com"> Tomoko </a>. Bertel Schmitt is a founding board member of the <a href="http://www.offshoresuperseries.com"> Offshore Super Series </a>, an American offshore powerboat racing organization. He is co-owner of the racing team Typhoon.

More by Bertel Schmitt

Comments
Join the conversation
2 of 23 comments
  • Jellodyne Jellodyne on Mar 14, 2013

    Maybe she could buy a car and then rent it to someone who needs a car but didn't 'win the lottery'.

  • Doctor olds Doctor olds on Mar 15, 2013

    Interesting insight into China and the "law" of unintended consequences.

  • Dave Holzman My '08 Civic (stick, 159k on the clock) is my favorite car that I've ever owned. If I had to choose between the current Civic and Corolla, I'd test drive 'em (with stick), and see how they felt. But I'd be approaching this choice partial to the Civic. I would not want any sort of automatic transmission, or the turbo engine.
  • Merc190 I would say Civic Si all the way if it still revved to 8300 rpm with no turbo. But nowadays I would pick the Corolla because I think they have a more clear idea on their respective models identity and mission. I also believe Toyota has a higher standard for quality.
  • Dave Holzman I think we're mixing up a few things here. I won't swear to it, but I'd be damned surprised if they were putting fire retardant in the seats of any cars from the '50s, or even the '60s. I can't quite conjure up the new car smell of the '57 Chevy my parents bought on October 17th of that year... but I could do so--vividly--until the last five years or so. I loved that scent, and when I smelled it, I could see the snow on Hollis Street in Cambridge Mass, as one or the other parent got ready to drive me to nursery school, and I could remember staring up at the sky on Christmas Eve, 1957, wondering if I might see Santa Claus flying overhead in his sleigh. No, I don't think the fire retardant on the foam in the seats of 21st (and maybe late 20th) century cars has anything to do with new car smell. (That doesn't mean new car small lacked toxicity--it probably had some.)
  • ToolGuy Is this a website or a podcast with homework? You want me to answer the QOTD before I listen to the podcast? Last time I worked on one of our vehicles (2010 RAV4 2.5L L4) was this past week -- replaced the right front passenger window regulator (only problem turned out to be two loose screws, but went ahead and installed the new part), replaced a bulb in the dash, finally ordered new upper dash finishers (non-OEM) because I cracked one of them ~2 years ago.Looked at the mileage (157K) and scratched my head and proactively ordered plugs, coils, PCV valve, air filter and a spare oil filter, plus a new oil filter housing (for the weirdo cartridge-type filter). Those might go in tomorrow. Is this interesting to you? It ain't that interesting to me. 😉The more intriguing part to me, is I have noticed some 'blowby' (but is it) when the oil filler cap is removed which I don't think was there before. But of course I'm old and forgetful. Is it worth doing a compression test? Leakdown test? Perhaps if a guy were already replacing the plugs...
  • Crown No surprise there. The toxic chemical stew of outgassing.
Next