2007-08-17

Would you buy a OneLakhCar? (Part-2)

What if the OneLakhCar were to become popular?

Nightmare! I am not saying everyone should not have a car. I am just surmising about what will happen if they do. Are were prepared for it at any level? There are several ways to slice this issue. Here are some that came to my mind.

Roads: Indian cities are not built to accommodate so many cars, not so soon at least. And cities like Bangalore, definitely not, with chock-a-block two-lane roads, piled-up four-lane ones. Mayhem will be an understatement for what we will witness. As if autorickshaws are not a menace enough that we need more of such devilish vehicles. Come to think of it, the economy of a OneLakhCar (A Bajaj 3-wheeler costs 1.75 lakhs on road) combined with the promise of a 5-seat capacity, might just mean we will see the end of these reckless rattlers which are nothing but necessary evil. This is probably the only positive outcome of the OneLakhCar.

Traffic Indiscipline: Not all people who drive cars can ride bikes, probably because they never learnt to ride a bicycle (basic reason, reasons of relative safety keeps many off the roads). People who might otherwise not have driven because they could only afford a bike they could not ride, will be more inclined to drive. So, we will see more new drivers. For Indian drivers 'Driving is a privilege not a right' are words lost in the din. One can get a license to drive a car if he has a couple of hundred bucks in his pocket. With such abysmal regulation on who is given license to drive, the potential havoc caused by millions of more car drivers on roads leaves little to imagination.

Parking space and its effect on real estate: Go to the 'downtown' areas in any of the cities and you will notice that we just do not have the space to keep these cars. Even now, parking is not very economical, if available at all. Not just commercial parking, but personal parking too is important. How many of the builders with 600 apartments or more in a compound have actually planned for a car in every family? With such need for parking space, real estate prices will move north.

Environmental concerns: Emission levels will probably be low for a small engine like that of OneLakhCar's but only if the right fuel is used and the car is regularly tuned and maintained. What if adulterated and mixed (for economic benefit) fuel is used? People do it with a 1.75 Lakh rickshaw. Will they refrain from experimenting on a 1 Lakh Car? Pollution control is not as strictly enforced as required, except probably in the National Capital Region.

How will these cars be recycled (they will need to be at some point in time)? Most of the junked cars end up being cannibalised for spare parts (legal only in some cases) or their metal parts being melted and recycled. What will you do with millions of tonnes of composite frames and bodies of the OneLakhCars? Bio-degradable waste is itself difficult to dispose (for reasons of volume), where will we find space to dump composite bodies?

More cars, more green house emissions, more global warming. This outcome was always expected, but the OneLakhCar will only accelerate this process. No, I am not saying people should stop buying cars. Technologically advanced those maybe, but five times as many cars as in India are sold in the US itself. Why should Indians not be buying them? Fair, if India were not per-capita a 9th the size of the US. The thought that one million cars will be sold every year is mindboggling. Current annual car sales in India stand at about 600,000; there will be three times as many cars getting into Indian roads every year, if the TATAs meet their target.

Two-wheeler business will be worst hit, as repeat bike buyers are expected to be converted in to car buyers. Heavy pressure to push prices and costs down will only lead to planned declines in production of bikes and it will be no surprise if other companies too convert their facilities to make variants of the OneLakhCar. Renault has plans to bring out the $3000 car with Bajaj auto (talks with M&M fell through). The Renault car will be probably be more advanced than OneLakhCar in terms of safety as it has a higher tag.

In principle, Ratan Tata's dream of getting a car into every home may turn out to be a pyrrhic victory. The economical car may come at a big price for India in the long run. Rise in standard of living of socio-economic categories, as my untrained-in-economic-theories-mind perceives happens when the affordability of goods increases based on true increase in income to reach that level of affordability not when the level of affordability is brought down to existing levels of income. Commoditisation happens when the latter phenomenon is brought about. In a gimpy infrastructure, only the load on the system increases when commoditisation happens in items such as cars.Were these cars special in terms of environment-friendly technology such as electric or solar, the argument could have been reversed. Apparently, they are not.

Maybe I am being simply too biased against this car for some paranoia I cannot explain. Maybe it will not be so bad after all. Maybe I have not fathomed the adapting power of the Indian system. Then maybe, I am just dreaming!

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