hph6203 said:
Would bet a significant proportion of EVs sold don't get a credit, so when you say they're uncompetitive it's you not knowing the market.
What you're missing is that China has invested heavily in accelerating cost reductions associated with EV production and if you want to know where the cost of materials is headed for EVs you should look at what they are producing and selling EVs for and the cost reductions are nowhere near done, nor is the technological progression.
In short, you aren't paying attention. None of you are. You thin ICE vehicles will remain competitive in perpetuity, you are wrong.
You say it's appropriate to incentivize domestic production of oil, the tax credit is incentivizing domestic production of batteries/EVs.
What % of EV purchases are accompanied by tax credits? What % of the market is EV vs ICE/hybrid? Take those 2 and multiply them and you will find just how non competitive they are.
Eta - to be clear I'm saying to multiply the non tax credit accompanied EVs by the proportion of EV market share.
And as an anecdote to demonstrate my point, I leased a $50,000 EV for $150/month for 2 years. Desperation for the dealer is a win for me.