Why owning an average car costs $650 000+

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  • Опубліковано 27 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 3,7 тис.

  • @TechAltar
    @TechAltar  2 роки тому +354

    If you have questions about how these numbers came to be, check out my sources and calculations: 1drv.ms/x/s!AnEbV6tNc655iOxRCEGuJwAYd6SCEw?e=rQilM0
    If you are looking for an e-bike, check out the Cowboy (affiliate link): www.tkqlhce.com/click-100602223-15255602
    Corrections:
    - The 4144 EUR rail ticket apparently includes free city-wide transit as well. I didn't know this, but that would make the calculation at 6:18 even cheaper.
    Clarifications:
    - The Berlin public transport figures only include BVG, not S-Bahn & Regio (both cost and revenue side). This is done simply because BVG figures are more easily broken out, while the rail figures are harder to separate from the German Rail figures who runs them. Note that this means that there are actually more people taking public transportation because of this than I said, but for the sake of a cost calculation, the BVG figures should be accurate.
    - Note that I'm comparing total cost of car ownership (including non-financialized externalities, such as pollution) vs. public transport/bikes costs, which don't fully include externalized costs. This is because such numbers have not been accurately been made for a comparison as far as I know. This means this is not a perfect comparison. That said, keep in mind that public transport companies, unlike private car owners, do have to directly pay for the vast majority of their own infrastructure except bus lanes (rail infrastructure, parking, repair, accidents, etc.), and cause much less pollution (a tram here in Berlin does 1/7th per passenger vs. cars for example) and meanwhile bikes take up about 1/10th as much space for both parking and riding as cars + their roads don't need to be re-paved nearly as often. So keep in mind that these costs are not included, but they would hardly tip the scales.

    • @toms8812
      @toms8812 2 роки тому +36

      There's another alternative to all of this - buy used car, then depreciation isn't anything close to your numbers. I'm driving 10 years old premium car and depreciation is around 1k/year. Maintenance costs are lower as well, because I don't have to go to the official dealer to change oil or fix something, I can go to any mechanic or even do it myself. If you buy used car you can save up the money to buy it straight away so you will also be saving on leasing expenses.

    • @hopolapopola
      @hopolapopola 2 роки тому +11

      @@toms8812 yeah but does that cut the costs as much as just, having better public transport and biking infrastructure? i highly doubt that

    • @1121494
      @1121494 2 роки тому +3

      ​@@kj4derEchte Hey, that is an interesting System of Maths of yours that puts 9.4 Billion in Kfz-Tax per Year as 10 times the amount of the 12 Billion of just the Costs of the BAB-System (not even complete numbers of those) per year. Stick Fuel Tax where the sun doesn't shine, as it comes mainly from heating, so that would be B/S of yours.
      So direct Car specific Tax does not even cover Bundesautbahnen in our measly conventional Mathematics, not to mention Car Specific Expenditures for other Federal Expenditures on Cars and public expenditures on your car on State level, District and local Levels. If you just make up claims, you should remember all public incomes and expenditures are completely public for everyone to check your statements against the Reality of the Bundeshaushaltsplan, not just to public servants using those Haushaltplan publications, not even just to every Citizen, but to everyone!
      So, giving you a fair chance of not argueing in completely bad faith or ignorance wish-believes but you having come up with an entirely new Maths:
      Please elaborate your entirely new system of the Science of Mathematics behind the opening numbers, go ahead!

    • @toms8812
      @toms8812 2 роки тому +19

      @@hopolapopola I'm all pro biking infrastructure, but you don't realize that even if majority of people would drop cars for public transport the need for car infrastructure wouldn't disappear, because we still need roads and parking spaces for so many things - deliveries, construction, natural resource extraction, transportation to farms, forests, wind farms etc. less people who own cars would mean that the cost of maintaining this infrastructure for person who doesn't own a vehicle would increase.

    • @HeadsetHistorian
      @HeadsetHistorian 2 роки тому +19

      Why do these stats include 250 a year for car washing and 200 a year for 'navigation'? The stats seem really absurd tbh.

  • @NotJustBikes
    @NotJustBikes 2 роки тому +2266

    Great summary! I'm constantly amazed at how much regular drivers underestimate the cost of driving. They usually don't think past gas and maybe insurance.
    At the municipal level, the non-profit organization Strong Towns has done extensive calculations across dozens of cities to show that sprawling car-centric infrastructure is always a net-negative for cities, and it has many knock-on costs to other infrastructure (especially water and sewer costs) that are literally bankrupting cities.
    But because cars are expensive - horrendously expensive - people who pay for them think they've paid their way, and there's an entitlement from many drivers. Meanwhile, in the majority of cities, local roads are paid for by property tax or local sales taxes, which means that everyone in the city pays for local roads, regardless of whether they drive or not. If you want cyclists to "pay their way", then you should start calculating their refund cheques.
    On a personal note, my next video (coming out on Monday) talks about how our family has saved tens of thousands of dollars since we went car free. That has been so financially liberating for us, but it's only possible because the cities we live in were designed properly. Many people (and especially Americans) don't have that luxury, which is a major problem.

    • @etbadaboum
      @etbadaboum 2 роки тому +59

      Ahah so great to have a teasing of your next video through a related one

    • @sysosmaster
      @sysosmaster 2 роки тому +19

      And there you hit the nail on it’s head, to live car free, society needs to be made for it to do so. And that will take time. Even in the Netherlands (where I live), going car free is not a economic option. Yes we all pay more due to that but public transport needs to be much better before it’s an alternative. (And I use it mainly for the longer trips when possible & not adding over 50% to my travel time…. Which exclude the trip to my Girlfriend. And to many of my Family.
      Sadly I believe that unless the VVD stops being behind the controls in our country this will not change.

    • @battokizu
      @battokizu 2 роки тому +15

      >cities
      Yea, not living in those. Sorry if my net cost destroys society but... not my problem. Thanks for reading my feel good blog. Also stop watching youtube videos and other streaming heavy platforms since your contributing to the waste of fresh water. ;)

    • @moparman5047
      @moparman5047 2 роки тому +11

      Glad I’m 17 with my 74’ ford ranchero, nothing but the road ahead, sucks that people nowadays are only focusing on the small things instead of bigger ones, like chinas and indias pollution and other corporations that pollute, cars are not the only problem.

    • @sysosmaster
      @sysosmaster 2 роки тому +66

      @@battokizu how is destroying society (of which you are a member) not your problem though?

  • @adisaxena1009
    @adisaxena1009 2 роки тому +748

    I am from Delhi, India. The Delhi Metro has completely revolutionised the travelling habits of the people. Its high speed, clean and air conditioned transportation that charges you a fraction of what you would spend on fuel. It has evidently reduced the number of cars on the roads. Then came Uber and Ola, the ride share apps which has completely subsided the need for owning a car. My father is surprised how I have been earning since 5-6 years and refuse to buy a car. (I just take his if I need. 😂)

    • @KarrasBastomi
      @KarrasBastomi 2 роки тому +26

      Delhi metro were amazing!

    • @DrShauryaGarg_INTD
      @DrShauryaGarg_INTD 2 роки тому +9

      Resonate 100%

    • @thelakeman2538
      @thelakeman2538 2 роки тому +38

      Delhi metro is very good in comparison to other metro systems in the country, but imo that city still needs greater investment in public transport especially buses and complete integration between all modes of public transit, like I doubt any Indian city has a unified transport authority and a unified pass for all public transit (there was an attempt in Chennai a decade ago but that got buried and never implemented). I have not been to Delhi for a decade by this point but from the data car sales seem to be still rising. Plus in the case of Delhi specifically the number of vehicles entering the city from outside Delhi through highways in a day equals the number of new vehicles registered in the city in a year, so there needs to be an effort to integrate the NCR region and surrounding states into rail and bus transit if traffic and pollution issues are to be resolved.

    • @shaileshbhat6131
      @shaileshbhat6131 2 роки тому +39

      In India, a car is more than just a transportation unit. It's a status symbol for most people. Bigger the car, higher the status.

    • @tzarcoal1018
      @tzarcoal1018 2 роки тому +44

      @@shaileshbhat6131 honestly i feel like that is a global thing, true for any country.

  • @alexnefi
    @alexnefi 2 роки тому +593

    I think you made a massive oversight in this video. No sane person with a low income buys a new car every 4-6 years. Most people in that income class don't buy new cars ever. They buy used cars, which drastically reduces cost of ownership. Also, I'd argue that a VW Golf isn't exactly a bottom-shelf car, it's actually rather expensive. Something like a used Renault Clio or Renault Twingo would be a more likely candidate (New VW Golf starts at 30k€, new Renault Clio starts at 17k€, for reference).
    I'm not saying all your arguments are false, they are actually quite valid, I'm just saying the cost of car ownership might be quite overblown compared to the real world.

    • @vulgoalias4050
      @vulgoalias4050 2 роки тому +96

      Yes, this assumption bothered me a lot. I like my cars mature. If it is not old enough to watch porn, it's not old enough for me. I currently own two cars, that I paid $1400 for. I spent a total of CA $400 on maintenance

    • @diariodeumcasalviking5425
      @diariodeumcasalviking5425 2 роки тому +50

      Completely agree. This video is about stupid people who buy new cars every few years. Oversight is massive on comfort and convenience of cars (especially if you buy older reliable cars that had almost or all the depreciation done)

    • @b0kix953
      @b0kix953 2 роки тому +34

      It does not make a big difference really. Used cars will be cheaper for you upfront but you will have higher maintenance costs and a shorter lifespan which means you will have to replace your car sooner so it will make only a small impact on the overall costs.

    • @alexnefi
      @alexnefi 2 роки тому +52

      @@b0kix953 you do realize that new cars lose most of their value in the first 3-4 years? It does make a big difference.

    • @vulgoalias4050
      @vulgoalias4050 2 роки тому +4

      Depends on what kind of a used car are you getting. If you buy a couple years old car, that used to cost $15K and now costs $12K, the difference is not that big. If you get a car, that used to cost $15K and you get it for $500, its uncomparable.

  • @Blackadder75
    @Blackadder75 2 роки тому +413

    I agree with everything, except one financial detail, people always take the new car cost in calculation, but most private people don't buy a brand new car, but a car that is a few years old. So I think it would be more fair to take a 4 year old Golf and let somebody use that for 10 years, and then they buy another 4 year old Golf etc... Richer people of course can buy new cars, but I think they are not the majority.

    • @jlspma
      @jlspma 2 роки тому +82

      Not to mention the actual financial cost someone is willing to pay for your car (the value of the car in the market) is not directly correlated with how useful it is. You trust the car you bought 15 years ago, and are happy to keep using it, but wouldn't pay even 500€ to get the equivalent old car from someone you don't know. Someone that drives a good car that is easy and cheap to maintain and driving it til it dies, is a lot cheaper than systematically buying cars every 10/12 years whether new or second hand.
      Remember even the cheap Fiat or Hyundai sedans, well maintained, are being used as Taxis in Istanbul with odomoters at 800,000km+. Cars last a long time, or a lot of km, they just need to be well maintained.

    • @lejoshmont2093
      @lejoshmont2093 2 роки тому +18

      My latest car was 16 years old and didn't cost much it won't take to long for insurance to overcome how much I paid.

    • @lejoshmont2093
      @lejoshmont2093 2 роки тому +6

      @@jlspma yes you have to maintain your car and maintain it well and a lot will last you a long time / many miles.

    • @anon_y_mousse
      @anon_y_mousse 2 роки тому +19

      I've never bought a new car. Never will.

    • @kiranp5611
      @kiranp5611 2 роки тому +4

      I think this happens only in Europe where there is regulated 2nd market exists. In India & many other countries people mostly prefer to buy a new car instead of a used car even when it's out of their reach.

  • @ergergzbhzefer
    @ergergzbhzefer 2 роки тому +290

    Techaltar is going full orange pill and I’m here for it!

    • @TheCatLoverLord
      @TheCatLoverLord 2 роки тому +10

      What does that mean

    • @siddharthsharma8940
      @siddharthsharma8940 2 роки тому +3

      Orange pil?

    • @ergergzbhzefer
      @ergergzbhzefer 2 роки тому +37

      @@TheCatLoverLord it’s a reference to the UA-cam channel NotJustBikes :)

    • @frida507
      @frida507 2 роки тому +12

      Hard to keep track of all pill colors...

    • @BCrossing
      @BCrossing 2 роки тому +11

      @@ergergzbhzefer if you're going to make quirky references to other channels at least make them actually recognisable at a glance

  • @herrbert2505
    @herrbert2505 2 роки тому +12

    As a student I've owned a Toyota Corolla (Austria), paid 6.200€ and sold after 5 years for 3.000€ - 640€ per year. I've driven 30.000 km with it, which cost about 4.000€ (high estimate) - so 800€ per year. Taxes came in at 600€ per year and repairs and service (new brakes, oil, etc.) make up for 500€ per year. Makes 2540€ per year. Let's be generous and say 3000€. It saved me at least a full day per year in time on planing, walking, waiting, scheduling my time to fit the public trans. schedule and ultimately gave me more time to spend with my family. It also eneabled me to opt for higher paying summer jobs, which would've never been reachable by public transportation (otherwise I would have needed to rent an expensive apartment somewhere near while still paying for my other one). I had the option to buy stuff in bulk, which I could have never carried home otherwise, thus saving me additional money. It gave me flexibility, freedom and spontaneity. I've learned a lot on the way. Absolute win, keep breathing fart air in your crowded hot & stinky bus. In the meantime, I will be driving full speed on the highway.

  • @ConanOG
    @ConanOG 2 роки тому +562

    One thing I think people misjudged: expensive cars doesn't get more subsidy from the public than cheaper cars, heavier cars/trucks/busses do. If we only ran light cars and motorcycles our roads would last several years more than our practical use with heavy vehicles to transport our stuffs and people, the impact on road materials increases a lot with the high weight vehicles.

    • @dougpatterson7494
      @dougpatterson7494 2 роки тому +35

      I think he equated “more expensive” to “bigger/heavier”. While not the full story it is a simplified and generalized way to look at it. A higher end trim of the same vehicle model is almost always heavier.

    •  2 роки тому +27

      Trucks are ~3-10x heavier than heavy cars. But it's true most SUVs are pointless and as usefull as any (lifted) wagon like A4/6 allroad, Outback...

    • @paulzapodeanu9407
      @paulzapodeanu9407 2 роки тому +12

      To my knowledge, most damage to roads is done by weather mostly freeze/thaw cycles, so I’m not very sure that roads for bikes would be cheaper from that perspective. Though they could be much smaller and that should
      generate a significant cost reduction.

    • @ConanOG
      @ConanOG 2 роки тому +8

      @@paulzapodeanu9407 it doesn't freeze everywhere, where I live the temperature never goes that low

    • @kockgunner
      @kockgunner 2 роки тому +41

      It’s so dumb how big cars have gotten. Everyone wants a bigger car to feel “more safe” on the road. It wastes space on parking, roads, damages roads, creates blind spots, causes more damage when crashed, uses more fuel, are more expensive. There are no benefits.

  • @prospersikhwari5289
    @prospersikhwari5289 2 роки тому +230

    As a South African I can’t imagine how a functional public transport system would even look like for me to consider not owning a car.

    • @tomd-k830
      @tomd-k830 2 роки тому +57

      Yep, even i as a german who lives in the suburban area of a big city can´t imagine that. I gave public transport a lot of tries and always was running late, took forever to get to my destination and so on. Nevertheless, i get the point, of Techaltar, that if we would´ve spend money more on public transport instead of car infrastructure, maybe public transport wouldn´t be as shitty. I really don´t know how to fix this but i think that on street parking should be terminated and that there should be more underground car parking garages below already existing infrastructure. Then of course, you pay for parking, cars are kept out of parts of the town. But personally, i like my car, i am able to afford it and will continue to drive on my own.

    • @ditsepusegerane7942
      @ditsepusegerane7942 2 роки тому +11

      As a fellow South African, please hear me out. Get a motorcycle.

    • @ConSdr
      @ConSdr 2 роки тому +14

      True bru, its not like we have other dependable forms of transport either like rail in other countries and the cities here are built for cars first, so cycling and walking are a definite hassle and unreliable.
      It would be great to see south africa gradually shift to other forms of transport and develop the infrastructure needed like railway lines and bicycle lanes and keep amenities in walking distance, it would help the country in an unimaginable way imo.
      Build the city for the people, not the cars kinda mentality.

    • @petterericson6230
      @petterericson6230 2 роки тому +6

      You could ask someone from the two thirds of the population who don't own a car.

    • @YouTubeGlobalAdminstrator
      @YouTubeGlobalAdminstrator 2 роки тому +1

      @@petterericson6230 we're not talking low income individuals, unless you want to drive in a SA taxi or train...

  • @Georgije2
    @Georgije2 2 роки тому +114

    I read an article saying something like this before I bought my first car, so I decided to systematically write down every single expense I have with it into an Excel spreadsheet. So including all insurance, servicing, gasoline, tires, road taxes, depreciation, etc. And I came up with just under 20.000€ over 7 years and 90.000 km. So as I have suspected, owning a car is not terribly expensive at all if you buy a reasonable car.

    • @mxbx307
      @mxbx307 2 роки тому +26

      In my experience cars are only expensive if you buy swanky gas guzzlers on finance. If you buy a BMW M3 on a finance deal, have to pay the insurance, the high fuel costs because it guzzles petrol at current prices, BMW's mafia service costs which you have to pay as part of the terms of the finance - of course it gets expensive.
      It can also get expensive if you keep buying ancient disposable shitboxes, like someone I knew who did. He was buying a "new" car every year or two because they broke down or fell apart, with expensive or impractical repairs even if you could get parts.
      Granted that was 20 years ago and he was buying cars from the mid-late 1980s. Today's ancient shitboxes are much better than the older ones.
      Just buy a respectable, recent used car for a sensible price and it's probably going to be absolutely fine.

    • @thebyzocker
      @thebyzocker Рік тому +7

      @@mxbx307 if you however buy a daweoo matiz (funny car) that's about 10-15 years old now for about 5 grand, you pay 16€ in taxes a year and a full tank barely costs 60 euros in today's fuel prices and you get about 500km of range with it

    • @luizprestes6795
      @luizprestes6795 Рік тому +14

      you just forgot the part of being heavy subsidized by everybody taxes.

    • @Georgije2
      @Georgije2 Рік тому +1

      @@luizprestes6795 What do you mean?

    • @davixpixie243
      @davixpixie243 Рік тому +13

      ​@@Georgije2 cars body enormous amount for things like 4 to 5 plots of land for a single car in its lifetime, road maintenance, pollution subsidiaries and surveys and many many expenses which the gov has to undertake

  • @alanthefisher
    @alanthefisher 2 роки тому +692

    Fantastic video with the cost breakdowns. It is absolutely insane how much we spend and justify on car infrastructure when there are obviously more efficient ways to spend our time and money on transit.

    • @MadhavVij
      @MadhavVij 2 роки тому +19

      Just throw in some TRAINS and call it a day.
      I am obviously half joking, but investment in public transit and well designed cities will go a long way.
      We really need to think about subsidizing car oriented infrastructure and it's effects on climate change.

    • @swgar
      @swgar 2 роки тому +16

      About time spending: for me it is common situation in Berlin to choose between 20 minutes by car or over an hour by public transport. Each way.

    • @DaDARKPass
      @DaDARKPass 2 роки тому

      Go F*ck yourself, Alan Fisher. Cars >>>>> Trains, and suburbs are better than your f*cking ass. Leave this planet now you b+tch.

    • @Amir-jn5mo
      @Amir-jn5mo 2 роки тому

      I love it, all the transit community is here in the comments.

    • @EmyrDerfel
      @EmyrDerfel 2 роки тому +4

      @@swgar You're meant to pay attention to the road while driving. You can do other stuff while travelling on public transport, like watching UA-cam videos.

  • @squelchedotter
    @squelchedotter 2 роки тому +335

    The Bahncard 100 actually includes local transportation! It is valid on the entire BVG and S-Bahn network too, you don't need to add the numbers.
    That is how it makes sense for a lot of people to own. If you are regularly in two cities, it quickly makes sense. I also know people who live a digital nomad lifestyle using it, where they will spend a lot of nights on the train.

    • @fulconandroadcone9488
      @fulconandroadcone9488 2 роки тому +29

      Wait 4000 euro for basically full country wide public transport? That is less then the cost of gas for a modest commute here. Event without high gas prices. Wow. I knew cars are no good, but that it is this bad of a disconnect is amazing.

    • @mohamedaminekoubaa5231
      @mohamedaminekoubaa5231 2 роки тому +3

      @@fulconandroadcone9488 including ice s

    • @swgar
      @swgar 2 роки тому +2

      @@fulconandroadcone9488 4000 per person. And even 4000 € is about 2500 liters of Super at current price. It's about 2 times more than average german drive.

    • @schadowization
      @schadowization 2 роки тому +9

      @@swgar maintenance costs, tires, taxes, insurance still exist tho....
      In my case: insurance 1000, taxes 380, 450 per service, 650 for a set of tires (last about 3 years) , and then fuel. That's just the running costs. The initial cost of buying the cars is another animal.

    • @eternalvoid2678
      @eternalvoid2678 2 роки тому +8

      @@swgar you didn't watch the video, did you? :P
      The whole point is that just the gas isn't even close to the total cost of owning car.

  • @claudionunziante9347
    @claudionunziante9347 2 роки тому +148

    "3000€ of depreciation every year" wow I didn't know that my car lost 300% of its value during the three years of me owning it, plus now there are a lot of solutions that avoid this "cost".

    • @lukasausen
      @lukasausen 2 роки тому +10

      i think he was saying about the VW golf.

    • @claudionunziante9347
      @claudionunziante9347 2 роки тому +12

      @@lukasausen that's not the problem here, the thing is that you cannot consider both the depreciation and the maintenance as costs.

    • @merlin0681
      @merlin0681 2 роки тому

      @@claudionunziante9347i don't get why he would count that in

    • @lukasausen
      @lukasausen 2 роки тому +4

      @@claudionunziante9347 arent they costs? Wdym

    • @claudionunziante9347
      @claudionunziante9347 2 роки тому +11

      @@lukasausen the thing is that he tried to pass the depreciation of a car as an hidden cost of owning one, that's an incorrect statement because if someone bought a car then he was already aware of this cost so it's not hidden.
      His theory also didn't consider the possibility of leasing instead of buying.
      I own a car and I will use it to return home from university every weekend spending around 30/40€ in fuel and 3 hours driving, making the same trip with a train will cost me double both in price and time, in the 2 years that I will spend there attending my master degree that amounts around 2800€ and 280 hours more.
      I paid my car 3k 3 years ago and I used it to attend my bachelor so I already recovered some of its cost thanks to the fact that using the public transportation service is more costly than driving, using it for the next two years will allow me to "recover" the entire price without considering the fact that during this time I already avoided a lot of costs thanks to sharing my car with my friends and family (it's impossible to share the same train ticket 🤣)

  • @ambrosia7924
    @ambrosia7924 2 роки тому +16

    Man without a car, in a city with good transport alternatives, complains about cars for 20m
    Cars are the result of poor transport options. My trip to work literally takes twice the time, and costs more on public transport in Sydney.
    Transport stops late at night, and makes visiting friends difficult.
    And even if that was all fixed, my bad back makes public transport impractical for most trips, as it hurts to sit on most transport seats, and makes it impossible to carry heavy/bulky items (which I’m often carrying).

    • @sttonep242
      @sttonep242 2 роки тому

      Great comment! Many people forget the ones with medical problems

  • @whossname4399
    @whossname4399 2 роки тому +47

    I've owned the same car for 15 years, so not overly concerned about depreciation. Insurance, tax and maintenance on the other hand are massive expenses

  • @aurelien8773
    @aurelien8773 2 роки тому +43

    I think the cost of a car is greatly overestimated is this video.
    The depreciation of more than 3000€ a year is in the case of a brand new car but for a used cheaper car it's actually a lot less. I'm not even considering the fact that 75% of the people in France (that's probably the case in Europe too) don't own their cars but rent it.
    So you can probably divide the budget by a third or more.
    The insurance cost is above the roof. Nearly 1200€ for tax and insurance a year is probably the most expensive you can get in my country (France). As an exemple, i pay 300€/year for a car bigger than a Golf.
    What is other ? 1320€ is a lot so it might be interesting to precise what it is.
    To counter my own arguments, it seems that all the cost in this video are wildly overestimated (public transport, train, bike maintenance) or maybe Germany is ten time more expensive than France but i doubt it.
    To conclude, yes, owning a car is probably a lot cheaper than what you argue but so is the case for public transportation and bike. Overall your video makes total sense and the work behind it is impressive !

    • @sinbob
      @sinbob 2 роки тому +1

      Yes, the costs are counted for Berlin, which is obviously more expensive than most parts of France. Also the Germans love cars and change them often, have high insurance costs and have infrastructural priority for them. I still think the costs are a bit exaggerated.
      In Poland I pay for my mid tier SUV 7000 EUR yearly which includes lease, insurance, service, tires and depreciation. On top of that you have to add fuel, parking, maintenance which sums up to about 1700 EUR as I do drive very short distances mostly and go about without the car in the city. This means my cost totals at 8700 EUR yearly in Poland. Of course for a much nicer car than - A new Hyundai Tucson with nice specs.
      But the numbers fit. And in Poland that amount is much more to bear than in FR or DE

    • @syriuszb8611
      @syriuszb8611 2 роки тому +3

      I thought same about depreciation, but in 50 years you need at average 6 new cars, and the cost of 6 cars adds up almost exactly to the depreciation put in video. Also, if you are renting (long term), you for sure will pay for it more than depreciation, the renter would loose money if you didn't.
      Edit: the only thing is that most people buy second hand cars, so they pay way less for a car. But for those who buy brand new, it is right.

    • @jiyanreijnders4546
      @jiyanreijnders4546 2 роки тому +3

      i think it is just really generalised. i live in the netherlands and i got the cheapest insurance i could get for my 2003 volkswagen bora and it is 155 per month and taxes are 55 per month so i already pay €210 a month for the car if i don’t drive it. so i think the numbers could be somewhere near what they are telling us in this video but every country and specefic case differents from each other ofcourse

    • @Jo_124_
      @Jo_124_ 2 роки тому

      In Germany as well as the whole of Europe by far most of the people own a car rather than renting it. To be honest I'm shocked to hear and can't really believe that around 75% of France are renting cars instead of buying them. It would interest me if you have statistics for that.

    • @KaptainKerl
      @KaptainKerl 2 роки тому +1

      His calculation is the actual price of the car when you buy it + upkeep. upkeep alone is about 3k in germany. but you have to buy the car too, thats another 2k/year, depending on how long you keep the car.

  • @MaJuV
    @MaJuV 2 роки тому +466

    Most people (I know) do take cost of ownership into account. It's just that currently the alternatives aren't good enough.
    Biggest reasons to resist this is something you don't talk about: "Time to travel", "public transport availability (or lack thereof)", and safety on/during the trip (if you're working irregular hours or work in shifts).
    And that's something I sadly enough notice in your video. Your pov is a work-from-home single person with no kids. That's not the home/work life of the average person.
    A lot of people have kids (which can require you to travel a lot an can require you to take more luggage with you than bikes would allow), and most people still need to go back-and-forth to their workplace. And these workplaces often lie in areas that are not easily reached by public transport. Or if they have a good public transport available, they only run (well) during 7-19h, which then handicaps people who work in shifts (which is the case with a majority of blue collar workers). People who start at 4-5 AM and/or work until 9-10 PM (not even mentioning night shifts) often can't access this type of public transport, or have to travel in less safe circumstances.
    For me personally it's time-to-travel & road safety that is holding me back. But luckily that's changing. The Belgian government is slowly rolling out bike highways (fietssnelweg) pathways, and one is scheduled to come on my road to work in the future, which would provide me with a safe road to work that's a lot shorter than the current alternatives.

    • @ahmadihamid
      @ahmadihamid 2 роки тому +12

      Travel a lot with the kids? Wow you must be a great father.

    • @foryou6888
      @foryou6888 2 роки тому +88

      @Andreas Becker "I do this so you can" is not a good argument.

    • @SenorDelSol
      @SenorDelSol 2 роки тому +24

      You see, the problems you name are mostly because the system is forced towards cars. If cars and parking would be made more expensive and public transport better half of the people gad mad, always taxing the cars etc. Sadly most societies see cars as the way to move when you do well, you're poor if you don't. Luckily you also name the changes happening.

    • @DmitriWeissman
      @DmitriWeissman 2 роки тому +53

      @Andreas Becker no it isn't. I want to see you doing 40KM every day in 32C with 70% humidity. Do all people have showers at work? Or/and if you are an average person that physically can't do that. Or if you have couple of kids that you have to take to school/kindergarten in the morning, get to work, get the kids from where you put them in the morning, take them to whatever activity they are doing afternoon, do the shopping get and all of that within 12 hours.
      Before you start talking about kids on their own, in some countries it's illegal to leave kids unsupervised until certain age - even at home.
      So while you can and do, many others simply can't for very long list of reasons.

    • @luckyluca1346
      @luckyluca1346 2 роки тому +33

      I own a 2012 Subaru Legacy. That just doesn’t break. I live in Switzerland and my yearly costs are (converted to euros):
      - 2000 euro fo fuel (about 150 a month)
      - 700 euro for insurance
      - 300 for road tax
      - 1000 for parking
      But seeing that I live in a place that would take me 1.5hrs to commute to the office by public transport, and only 30 min with the car, I do enjoy the freedom of owning one and going on trips. I guess maintenance of a car is costly depending on how reliable it is or not.

  • @majestcb
    @majestcb 2 роки тому +80

    These numbers feel incredibly inflated, a standard 2018 golf in my country costs an average of 13k euros, maintenance 3-400e, fuel driving an average 20k a year @ 6l/100km @1.8euros/liter is 2.1k, insurance - 100e. The most it can depreciate is sub 1k a year as it starts off as not an expensive car. The absolute maximum being around 3.5k and even that is really pushing it. How do you even come up with 7.5k is beyond me.

    • @watcherit1311
      @watcherit1311 2 роки тому +20

      That 2018 Golf is not new. You were subsidized by the first owner. Don't forget, one disadvantage of public transport (including sharing) is that "it is old and dirty". Buying an old & dirty personal transport from the start is not much of an advantage.

    • @toms8812
      @toms8812 2 роки тому +22

      Exactly. If his number would be close to the truth then there would be next to no cars in Baltics.

    • @marceldiezasch6192
      @marceldiezasch6192 2 роки тому +35

      I second this.
      I even live in Germany, so this video is very applicable to me, but the costs don't add up. Insurance for a Golf isn't 1100€, it's 250€ if you just buy mandatory liability insurance. 480€ if you take the full insurance.
      Also 1300€ for "other" costs. Which other costs, maintenance was already accounted for with 600€, so this could be 85€ für TÜV, a bit for car washes etc., but how would you ever get to 1300€?

    • @singular9
      @singular9 2 роки тому +25

      I spend a lot of money taking care of my car and even with higher gas prices and inflation I don't spend over 4000$ a year on my car and I drive 20,000 miles a year. I agree. These prices make no sense.

    • @rrrr2150
      @rrrr2150 2 роки тому +14

      i'm sure anybody who is not a car addict would take the 6000 sample survey data over some random youtube comment but thanks for your insight anyway!

  • @sibolte1761
    @sibolte1761 Рік тому +33

    My extended family of 4 living in the suburbs of Florida, USA has 5 vehicles: two SUV's- one of them a junker for carrying groceries/furniture/construction the other SUV for moving family/friends and roadtrips, one expensive BMW Sedan purely for one person to drive to work (merely as a status symbol haha), and another sedan and hatchback for two young adults in college. Even though they are constantly repairing them, and literally have no room in the driveway to park them (so much that one has to be reparked on the street when mailman is not there), there is 0 chance they would get rid of them. Their convenience and other perks just outweigh any other benefit in the United States, it is a starkly different world than here in Europe.

    • @WisdomRanger
      @WisdomRanger 8 місяців тому

      That is amazingly expensive

    • @Slenderman63323
      @Slenderman63323 7 місяців тому

      Only because US cities are designed like crap and force you to shell out for a car

  • @matt69nice
    @matt69nice 2 роки тому +16

    You messed up the Excel formulae in the 60 year total and the figure made it into the video. You've summed B98:B137 and C98:C137 but these include the 50 year subtotals (and miss out the first 21 years of usage) which massively distorts the figure. If you're going to use subtotals like this I'd recommend you use the subtotal formula. The correct 60 year figures (based on the numbers you've decided to use) are 223,298 for the bike and 1,041,288 for the car. This sets the tone for the rest of my comment because if you were viewing any of this with a critical eye you might have noticed that the 60 year figure is more than double the 50 year figure. Suffice to say I think the approach you've taken is biased and overly simplistic.
    I'd also take issue with the approach to some of the figures you've used from studies (in particular the Gössling one) - the 'blame' for arising social problems caused by cars is being placed on car users ('selfish, stupid, ignorant drivers') with no critical analysis of the social factors affecting why people might *have to* use cars, and this whole video comes off as a sales pitch to get people to stop using cars which oversimplifies the complexities of the issues surrounding car use. I don't have the time to separate out which factors that have been added to the 'cost of car ownership' are fair to apportion to drivers themselves (I can think of several other interest groups that could bear responsibility for cars being necessary in the first place); that was supposed to be your job: to view the study with a critical eye rather than using it as a tool to sell bikes.
    This line from the Gössling study is interesting: "For example, many businesses provide vehicle parking facilities to employees and customers that are unpriced or priced below their full production costs (including land, construction and operating expenses), while providing no comparable benefit to those who travel by other modes." (And you make many similar arguments in the video.)
    I wouldn't consider taking less time to commute to be an employee benefit just because I live closer to work, that's time I'm saving because of where I live which isn't really either my choice (entirely) or my employer's; if an employee *needed* a car to get to work, it is surely appropriate that the employer provides a parking space, otherwise presumably the cost of parking would fall on the employee - why do both you and the study believe workers should be further penalised for driving to work if there is no other practical mode of transport? There are different ways of approaching this issue and this video gives no critical analysis.
    I'm disappointed to see the figures presented in the way they have been in this video. For example, you've given no explanation of why it would be appropriate to compare the cost of a car *including social costs* with the cost of public transport *without social costs* (did you think it was fair to assume that there were no social costs to public transport?), and then comparing just BVG subsidies with the full social cost of a car - what useful information is this actually giving us?
    I think the problem you have in tackling an issue like this is that making a simplistic comparison like this is never going to work - it's not providing information that can accurately assess the unique factors that motivate each driver to own and drive cars and whether or not it's possible or reasonable to ask them to ditch the car. I agree we need to reduce car usage but this video takes the wrong approach imo. What are the factors holding people back from shifting away from cars? I don't think you've adequately covered them in this video.

    • @poopslinger5250
      @poopslinger5250 2 роки тому +1

      such a well-thought out response. a shame it seems itll go to waste.

  • @Tapakapa
    @Tapakapa 2 роки тому +476

    Brilliant stuff! Really enjoyed how you avoided the typical surface level argumentation and instead took us on a deep dive into the actual numbers of car dependency costs. Love it 👌

    • @dkaloger5720
      @dkaloger5720 2 роки тому +1

      Very true , i havent seen these talking points anywhere else .

    • @annoyingguyoninternet1631
      @annoyingguyoninternet1631 2 роки тому +3

      Real Tapakapa wow!

    • @ToyotaCharlie
      @ToyotaCharlie 2 роки тому +3

      Mochst sowas für Wean a? Warat ur supa!

    • @amirmirzaei3940
      @amirmirzaei3940 2 роки тому +2

      I have a feeling you will make a video about this topic too in like a few months

    • @Nimadee
      @Nimadee 2 роки тому +3

      Numbers would be even more interesting for Vienna, since they paint themselves as a green city. But atleast we have 365 euro public transport.

  • @SlosII
    @SlosII 2 роки тому +26

    I don't know how it's possible but my yearly cost of owning a 2017 Skoda Octavia (bought second hand for 12k euros) is nowhere near the estimated 7600 euros mentioned in the video. I summed up all my costs and I am well below 3000 euros per year (including depreciation).

    • @MMXANCE
      @MMXANCE 2 роки тому

      well from watching half of it now it seems like he's trying to prove a point that cars are bad or something. It's biased but I get the point he's trying to make. he does sound like a communist slash marxist, which is no surprise seeing that he lives in Berlin

    • @jorgen8630
      @jorgen8630 2 роки тому +1

      I bought a Opel Astra (second hand, 1 year old, for 15k) and It's even lower for me, i barely spend 2k a year for everything. I don't get how people pay 600 euro for maintenance. I pay around 200 euro every year for maintenance. Also taxes and insurance are very low since it's a small eco-friendly car compared to the overpriced 2L engine Golf they showed in the video.

    • @mxbx307
      @mxbx307 2 роки тому +2

      Yep. I have a 6 year old (2016 model) Skoda Fabia in the UK and it's costing me about £1600 (about €1900) a year to keep on the road. It's not been getting as much use since COVID, but it cost me £7300 back in late 2019.
      The car is setting me back about 3-4% of my annual income at most in terms of cash costs. The UK estimates per-mile costs at 23p, so that's about £1150 in annual wear and tear although the car is exceptionally reliable and hasn't had any major issues. That £1150 is also hypothetical and not coming out of my pocket.
      In any case the convenience and freedom is definitely worth it, plus in my area you can expect to pay the same for a season ticket on crappy public transport that takes you nowhere and at times of their whim. You are also pre-paying for journeys you will never make and routes you will never use.
      Car wins. My personal opinion is that people are grossly exaggerating vehicular running costs and it saves me having to buy expensive train tickets, or pay delivery charges or suchlike.

    • @lovrovalentic3056
      @lovrovalentic3056 7 місяців тому

      ​@@mxbx307And you can also learn to work on cars 😅.

  • @alexandrgorobtsov7281
    @alexandrgorobtsov7281 2 роки тому +109

    Man, I love cars, I’m a car guy, but I absolutely agree with your points. Cities are for people, not for cars. Also car prices are ridiculous for average human or even a city (I mean road maintenance and parking spaces losses for city budget). If you don't absolutely need a car or just want car as a hobby don’t buy one.

    • @Jesse-2531
      @Jesse-2531 2 роки тому

      ? Wen I need a car dont buy one? Do you mean wen you are no care person, and dont live in the middle of nowhere. Dont buy a car.

    • @smoguli
      @smoguli 2 роки тому +5

      Or do like a lot of us are doing right now and get out of overpopulated cities. If you have the means and can work from home, do yourself a favor and get out while you can.

    • @fourthpanda
      @fourthpanda 2 роки тому +4

      @@smoguli I like living in cities with alot of people. As long as they are walkable... A city doesn't feel as crowded when you can get places without a car. I'm living in Tokyo so it's pretty much the definition.

    • @ConanOG
      @ConanOG 2 роки тому +4

      Big cities are too problematic too. We need to create medium size cities, not huge mega cities. At some point is just ridiculous the amount of people we have in just a few parts of the world while most of the other part doesn't any people.

    • @dmhendricks
      @dmhendricks 2 роки тому

      This video is just climate change propaganda, nothing more. Where I live, there are zero trains and nobody wants to ride a bike 30 miles to work every day in the snow. You are delusional if you believe that they do.

  • @KreskizKi
    @KreskizKi 2 роки тому +32

    1:40 I feel this is a bit manipulative, since apart from private cars, roads are also used by healthcare, fire deps, police, supply, public transit and maybe more. So I wouldn't say that society is paying for the drivers, since roads are useful also for people without a car

    • @Pragmatic_Optimist_MCR
      @Pragmatic_Optimist_MCR 2 роки тому +3

      At the same time, roads are twice the size to accommodate parking *only* for cars. Imagine the cost of streets that have no parking at all, only two lanes instead of four where public transport and trams can still drive.

    • @_r4x4
      @_r4x4 2 роки тому +3

      @@Pragmatic_Optimist_MCR I guess not every road is a 4 lane one, and not all of them has parking on it. In my city it's a majority of roads that are 2 lanes only without any parking on it's side. Strange, it seems like the world isn't only USA...

    • @Pragmatic_Optimist_MCR
      @Pragmatic_Optimist_MCR 2 роки тому

      @@_r4x4 If there is almost no parking space and no public parking lots that are for free, so that you always have to pay a ticket, except on your own property, that's great! I am from Berlin and every street has at least one lane for parking, even at the outskirts. Which is horrendous. Where do you live? Sounds great, if there is this little public parking space and more room for pedestrians/cyclists

    • @_r4x4
      @_r4x4 2 роки тому +1

      @@Pragmatic_Optimist_MCR just normal, not so big city in Poland (about 90k people). Parking is mostly dealt by your destination, so if you live in flat then there would be some parking spots nearby, work places or other destinations also tries to give some parking spaces. There isn't much of public parking spaces, I guess it's mostly because majority of people would say that using it when not needed would be unreasonable due to it's cost.k It's not that big city, so if you aren't going that far it won't be bad, dedicated biking infrastructure is almost non existent, but there are roads and pedestrian paths (or "dedicated" mixed use bike/pedestrian paths... Yeah you wouldn't even notice them if not sign putted there), but still enough for most people.

    • @sttonep242
      @sttonep242 2 роки тому +2

      True. I work for my city and I fix/maintain its infrastructure. It would be impossible to do that without my work truck. And how would city even work without roads for truck that bring goods?

  • @LuckasMS
    @LuckasMS 2 роки тому +3

    Using the cost of maintenance of roads and other infrastructure and tallying it as the cost of cars to the government makes no sense, any country literally needs roads for its logistics and therefore for the country as a whole to function

  • @MonguzTea
    @MonguzTea 2 роки тому +24

    I have a 1993 MX5. It doesnt depreciate anymore, its appreciating since 2020. Service is done by myself, parts and maintanence is very cheap. Its cheaper to run than public transport and saves me a lot of commuting time. Only an electric bike would be cheaper. Never buy a car on bank loan, buy used, pay in full.

    • @uFlock
      @uFlock 2 роки тому +1

      Scotty Kilmer is that you?

    • @KarrasBastomi
      @KarrasBastomi 2 роки тому +5

      You are not average. And 1993 mx5 is pushing 30 years old, not many everyday driver would know how to take care the old lady. Btw, good on you keeping her alive.

    • @G91YS
      @G91YS 2 роки тому

      Well... when many cities (at least in Europe) don't allow older vehicle (in Brussels: 2012 or earlier I think), and will entirely ban petrol vehicles in 2030-35, it'll be tough...

    • @filipruml
      @filipruml 2 роки тому

      @@G91YS The ban is on selling ICE vehicles but if you mean access to the city I don't see it as that much of an issue since P+R spots seem to be wildly available. At least in the west. Of course if you like old cars and live in a city you'd have a problem but I don't see that working out well even now due to lack of space.

    • @MonguzTea
      @MonguzTea 2 роки тому

      @@G91YS Its not banned here yet but they are considering the ban of older diesel cars without particule filter.

  • @andrewwalledge6101
    @andrewwalledge6101 2 роки тому +71

    The "All of Germany" annual train pass costs about the same as an annual season ticket from London to Chelmsford in Essex (a 31 mile journey). You can't use this ticket for ANY other journeys and if you need to travel onwards in London to anywhere else you'll need another £500-£1200 for a tube pass. You don't even get a guaranteed seat for that money either.
    Cars are a pain but UK trains are horrendously expensive.

    • @موسى_7
      @موسى_7 2 роки тому

      Bad government policy. Simple.
      Incompetent governance or corruption is not inherent to any form of transport.

    • @g4egk
      @g4egk 2 роки тому +13

      The rail network in the UK is an outlier and broken thanks to privatisation. "Rich man's railway"

    • @foryou6888
      @foryou6888 2 роки тому

      @@g4egk The publicly owned and run TFL (transport for London) is also expensive (an adult going between zones 1-9 is capped at £20 a day on payg, more on a day travelcard). Its the same for LNER services, publicly owned and expensive to ride (a trip both ways between London and Edinburgh can easily cost over £100 booked weeks in advance).

    • @matthewwatt2295
      @matthewwatt2295 2 роки тому +1

      @@foryou6888 It's not completely true to say TFL is publicly run - they are required to contract out the running of underground trains, bus routes etc. to private companies like Abellio, Arriva and MTR.
      We also have a government who are convinced that public transport has to turn a profit and pay dividends to its shareholders 😒.
      I suspect that LNER being required to operate as a publicly owned business in the framework of the previous franchise model also increases its cost. (I have to use it a lot and wish it was cheaper too!)

    • @foryou6888
      @foryou6888 2 роки тому

      @@matthewwatt2295 From what I gather the only part of tfl that was profitable pre-pandemic was the underground? Also I have no idea about LNER and how it is run, I just know its currently publicly owned (maybe not run I don't know), and charges quite a bit.

  • @WitchMedusa
    @WitchMedusa 2 роки тому +26

    Wait so you counted both car payment & depreciation in your calculations? That's a pretty big mistake that inflates your numbers A LOT.
    Especially since depreciation is not a fixed cost.

  • @seanC3i
    @seanC3i 2 роки тому +196

    Have to call this out, your figures include depreciation. While this is relevant for new and newer cars, a person has the option of buying a pre-owned car that may have less value in total than your annual depreciation cost. If you look at this from the perspective of someone who buys a 10 year old car (e.g. a reliable Toyota) the figures become dramatically smaller.

    • @onzaueb
      @onzaueb 2 роки тому

      If only used car factories would be a thing... but the lizard people won't allow it!

    • @tompaah7503
      @tompaah7503 2 роки тому +24

      Sorry, but what depreciation isn't, is maintenance. Older cars just need more maintenance. The cheaper the car, the higher maintenance costs they have. By a certain age and mileage nearly everything needs replacing.

    • @TheVektast
      @TheVektast 2 роки тому +94

      @@tompaah7503 You don't have a car, right?

    • @seanC3i
      @seanC3i 2 роки тому +26

      @@tompaah7503 Depends on what car you have, many Toyotas do not follow your rule.

    • @mggt4684
      @mggt4684 2 роки тому +25

      @@tompaah7503 New cars break more often then old cars.

  • @CookieEliminator
    @CookieEliminator 2 роки тому +7

    My gas costs a year are about 1000€ a year in Germany, insurance is below 1000€. Didn't have to repair anything in last five years. Golf 5. Did I forget some calculations? TÜV and Tax isn't more than 500€
    I would prefer to not use a car, like in Amsterdam. But getting to work and around is at the moment 3x faster than by rail for me.

    • @android-user
      @android-user 2 роки тому +3

      TÜV HU/AU? Maybe washing your car a few times a year.
      Depreciation is a weird point. I bought my car for 2000€, the money is gone, I am the last driver. Why would depreciation matter? I don't want so sell it. So that wouldn't count for me right?🤔

    • @CookieEliminator
      @CookieEliminator 2 роки тому

      @@android-user ah yes I forgot thanks, but still I'm overestimating my costs, I bet my fuel cost a year is still below 1000€ and insurance is just 800€ to be precise. Maybe it's just because I do not own a newer car? Even if I add a 1000€ a year for maintainance and stuff it's still much lower.

    • @tunnfisch7548
      @tunnfisch7548 2 роки тому

      It's obviously an estimate and will vary from person to person.
      Fun fact these calculations are based on numbers from the ADAC so I think they are fairly accurate.

    • @HeadsetHistorian
      @HeadsetHistorian 2 роки тому

      The numbers in this video also include 250 euro a year for car wash and 200 a year for navigation lol. it's complete nonsense.

  • @arviduebelacker
    @arviduebelacker 2 роки тому +84

    Small correction for 6:24: You most likely would not even need the 978€ ticket for Berlin as the BahnCard 100 that lets you travel by train in Germany actually includes CityTickets for local public transportation in 130 cities including Berlin (Zones A+B)

    • @em-jd4do
      @em-jd4do Рік тому +1

      WOW that is incredible

    • @pingvingaming
      @pingvingaming 10 місяців тому

      and the cost of the rails and the cost of the roads and parking wasnt counted in that price was it

    • @pingvingaming
      @pingvingaming 8 місяців тому

      @Egalitarian917 but the people that drives are the onces keeping socity working public transport is a pipe dream it wont work before the day people say cant wait to get rid of the car what an upgrade public transport is and that will never happen becuse public transport is broken by design

    • @pingvingaming
      @pingvingaming 8 місяців тому

      @Egalitarian917 doesnt work in denmark and in any of the countries you said
      can public transport take you to a random field anywhere in the country at any time of day and year in any weather conduction
      is it as fast as car no
      do you control the temperature no
      does you have to wait for it yes
      can you bring any tools no
      can you have weapson for hunting on bord no
      can i drink while on there no
      can my dog sit on the seat no
      can i drive the thing no
      do i have to listen to babys crying yes
      do you get there in time depens is there any kind of weather no
      tell me one thing that works with publc transport becuse right now i see none
      there is a reason a country can exist without public transport but no country exist without private transport becuse the public dosnt work due to limitations that is deal breaking
      well that sounds like a broken ass design to me

    • @pingvingaming
      @pingvingaming 8 місяців тому

      @Egalitarian917 you call me dishonest what have i said that isnt true

  • @jeromemillerjr3150
    @jeromemillerjr3150 2 роки тому +26

    Here’s what’s interesting for me. I live in the U.S, for the last couple years I’ve been thinkin that a well designed and built public system would be more beneficial to citizens than having a car, and I’m the type of person that legit loves to drive. And I’ll admit, I live in a city that has, what I’d consider, a poor public transportation system. So having a car is pretty much necessary. But if my city and other cities across the country would agree to develop one mass or several mass transit infrastructures. The benefits I feel would out way the expenses us citizens would have to pay and we’d be saving money in the long run.

    • @birchtree5884
      @birchtree5884 2 роки тому +12

      And, for the people like you who love to drive, a good transit system means the people who still drive are the ones who either need or want to drive. They're more likely to be good drivers, and having fewer idiots on the roads is good for everyone.

    • @lejoshmont2093
      @lejoshmont2093 2 роки тому +1

      I like subways they can be faster than a car. For city interconnect highspeed rail would be nice too. Unfortunately neither are common in the US.

    • @unconventionalideas5683
      @unconventionalideas5683 2 роки тому +5

      @@lejoshmont2093 Alternative modes are a lot more common than they were ten years ago. Problematically, because the country is so huge, and so many systemic factors feed into the problem, it will take a lot of effort and probably some years to correct the situation, unfortunately.

    • @ElAndresRodriguez
      @ElAndresRodriguez 2 роки тому

      You’ll never convince Americans to give up the freedom of their own cars and roads. We have a giant country that’s near impossible to cover with public transportation and rely on trucks for much more than you may think.

  • @fhujf
    @fhujf 2 роки тому +6

    2:51
    Why is depreciation categorized as a cost here? When you buy a car for a certain amount of money(let's say 20.000 euros), and it depreciates 2000 euros in a year, this is not money out of your pocket because you have already paid it. Adding it a second time(after the cost of purchase) does not seem to make sense.

  • @valexander7
    @valexander7 2 роки тому +5

    I really hope the Philippine government watches this video. This is exactly the reason why we need mass transportation and not just roads.

  • @alexlowe2054
    @alexlowe2054 2 роки тому +274

    I'm loving the Not Just Bikes revolution, where suddenly, even tech UA-camrs are starting to get involved with communicating the costs and problems of cars. Thank you for doing your part!

    • @boroborosu2410
      @boroborosu2410 2 роки тому +26

      you'll own nothing and you'll be happy

    • @midori9566
      @midori9566 2 роки тому +17

      @@boroborosu2410 Very original, only seen this line posted 50 times before. No clue where you're from but if it's the U.S like me your rights are simply a suggestion. We literally have a constitutional amendment that says you can be enslaved if you're imprisoned. Not to mention Civil Asset Forfeiture in case of a crime, it doesn't take much for a cop to plant a bag of drugs in your car, then for them to seize it as "Evidence."
      People shouldn't have to own massive, deadly machines to get to work. We don't own them, they own us and our streets.

    • @Yanate1991
      @Yanate1991 2 роки тому +4

      Yeah sod off

    • @lenjaminbang
      @lenjaminbang 2 роки тому +2

      I know RIGHT, after having joined r/fuckcars a year ago, just a month ago I found NotJustBikes and I couldn't get enough of it. So glad that more and more people realize the severeness of the cars' disadventages.

    • @Yanate1991
      @Yanate1991 2 роки тому +11

      @@lenjaminbang you sound like a bot with that wording

  • @hechss
    @hechss 2 роки тому +31

    It is ridiculous how we turned cities into parking lots. And I haven’t even been in North America, where pedestrians are not even considered.

    • @seabrookmx
      @seabrookmx 2 роки тому

      I don't know if I'd lump the entire _continent_ into the "pedestrians aren't even considered" bin.. New York, Montreal, and many others are pedestrian and/or cyclist friendly. But yes some of the worst places I've experienced for pedestrians are in NA (I'm looking at you, Los Angeles).

    • @sobreinquisidor
      @sobreinquisidor 2 роки тому

      It depends on the city. Vancouver and Seattle are decent in terms of public transportation and biking

  • @lc9245
    @lc9245 Рік тому +3

    Cost of car ownership is looked at through the microeconomics lens by us, or “how much do I pay for it”. This varies a lot, so it’s not very important. The much more important problem is related to cost of car ownership in cities. People owning motor vehicle in the countryside should not be a concern, the problem is the subsidies given to car commuting that encourages people to drive. The cost here seems high because it is calculated using city related figures. Bigger, more populous cities have gigantic car subsidies just by accommodating them and not charging drivers adequately. It might seem like a classist, dystopian nightmare to burden personal motor vehicle owners so much in city that only the needy and the rich can afford personal vehicle in cities, but that’s reality. We skewed the market by subsidising cars so much that we incur other cost to our health and time. Only by pricing it appropriately and combining with investment in dense mass transit and alternative transport can cities transportation be priced appropriately. It’s unfortunate but city transportation space and time are luxury and if you use it you should pay for it. In the countryside, this shouldn’t be an issue as large roads are subsidised by goods transportation. It works because there are not enough vehicles to be subsidised by goods volume. However, the moment there are enough cars using the same transport roads to cause traffic jam, the subsidy is used up and we enter deficit territory. That’s why only in and near cities are personal transport a big problem.

  • @OrigEntertainmentOfficial
    @OrigEntertainmentOfficial 2 роки тому +56

    Since half of car owners don't understand the costs of car ownership (including myself), can you explain the costs more fully at 2:48? What is included in "other?" You may also want to include a time factor for comparing different modes of transport. There is a cost for the amount of time it takes to get from door to door. Let's say walking is the cheapest form of transportation but it takes 1 hour to walk versus driving 15 minutes with a 5 minute walk from the parking to final destination. Taking the train might take 35 minutes plus a 10 minute walk, etc. There is a cost associated with these various times.

    • @G91YS
      @G91YS 2 роки тому +6

      Learn to live more slowly. Not in a rush. Yes you might lose some time, but you're free on the ride to read, learn, work too.

    • @zxil6
      @zxil6 2 роки тому +11

      2 possible counter counter arguments.
      First, are you willing to work during the saved time? If not and it's just for leasure, can you really convert the saved time into hard cash and compare it to the hard cash in the subsidies? If not, why not just make the subsidies even for private vs public (it states in the video that it's private leaning) and see which people pick? Being more market-ish rate?
      2nd, how much more time would be wasted in traffic jams if people drove more due to more drivers from reducing the subsidies for public transport or more subsides for private transport.
      Probably more relevant to cities already with traffic problems or in a city where there are people demanding more private transport subsidies.
      In the city that I live in with a relatively small population (1.5m), I've been in traffic jams during off peak hours that doubled the time for my trips. (Yes, I'm a car owner)

    • @fanban2926
      @fanban2926 2 роки тому +2

      Other might be parking and such

    • @KyrieFortune
      @KyrieFortune 2 роки тому +3

      yeah, of course it takes so much less by car, everyone is speeding. I have recently gotten my licence and I am constantly overtaken despite running at the speed limit - sometimes I speed and STILL I am overtaken by everyone.

    • @swgar
      @swgar 2 роки тому +3

      Biking should be much cheaper than walking since walking cause substantial shoe wear

  • @sofloflow
    @sofloflow 2 роки тому +1

    I take my lunch in my car, I dont want to be around people in the lunchroom. A bike / public transport can't help me there.

  • @new3sc
    @new3sc 2 роки тому +106

    Really loved the video.
    What we are seeing right now, is the result of Car Companies Lobbying for years and years all over the world.
    Here in the US, on a Residential Area of Sacramento, CA, I have to walk 2 Km for a crosswalk... Basically, if you don't have a car, you can't go anywhere, since the public transportation is no existent (I have never seen a Bus around my neighborhood for example).

    • @lejoshmont2093
      @lejoshmont2093 2 роки тому +1

      Ironically Sacramento was my first experience with a light rail.

    • @ThePowerLover
      @ThePowerLover 2 роки тому

      But now we're seeing quiete the opposite lobby. They want the private cars only for the "elite".

  • @PaulHojda
    @PaulHojda 2 роки тому +85

    If you look at the calculations for cars, the biggest single expense in that calculation is depreciation. If you buy a new car and keep it for 10-15 years, it shouldn't really matter very much, as it's been a useful asset in that time period. If you buy a 10 year old car and sell it when it's 15, it wouldn't have lost much value, as cars loose most value in the first 4 years. If you buy a new car and sell it after 4 years, then you are an idiot. I bought my car when it was 9 years old. Now it's 13 years old, and I could sell it for almost as much as I bought it for, because used car prices have increased.

    • @CastaneaMa
      @CastaneaMa 2 роки тому +12

      Also you can often share trips in your car with your family for basically no extra costs. In public transport, everyone needs their own ticket. Public transport is also heavily subsidized which is something not mentioned here at all. Just the cars social costs have been taken into consideration. Most ÖPNV operates at a hefty loss in Germany.

    • @deneb_tm
      @deneb_tm 2 роки тому +36

      @@CastaneaMa Please at least watch the video before whining about government subsidies for public transportation, that part IS being addressed here.

    • @Blox117
      @Blox117 2 роки тому +6

      useful? how is a 4000lb motorized wheelchair useful? i can ride my unicycle everywhere just as fast, go indoors with it, is less expensive quieter easier to use and so on/

    • @BigFx
      @BigFx 2 роки тому +7

      @@CastaneaMa he did actually cover the subsidies. The social cost is complete BS though. A bus driving on the same road also incurs same social costs. It's not like the roads disappear because there is less cars on it - you need deliveries, ambulances, police, whatever, so the road would be built anyway.

    • @deneb_tm
      @deneb_tm 2 роки тому +21

      @@BigFx There's a big difference between a street used primarily by cars and one used primarily by buses and service vehicles, in terms of noise and air pollution, maintenance, walkability, accessibility, and so on - simply because there are fewer motor vehicles going by. Obviously, some maintenance is always going to be required, and some roads or streets are never going to be pleasant, but as it stands, far too many of them could be if they weren't blighted by car traffic instead.

  • @raymagini8994
    @raymagini8994 2 роки тому +1

    As much as I would love to use public transportation only, it doesn‘t work for me.
    My family and I tried some things with the 9€ Ticket. We live in an average sized city in south Germany.
    Some examples:
    Visiting my Grandma:
    -50min by car; 1:50h by train -> okay
    Visiting friends:
    - 25min by car; 30min by train then he had to fetch me with his car from the station because there were no busses -> pointless
    Buying groceries:
    - 5-10min by car; no public transport at all
    Going to work:
    45 min with car, over 3 1/2h with train (not kidding!!!) -> absolutely impractical
    At least out car wasn’t new, I share it with two other family members and we have our own parking space…

  • @OussamaHamrouni
    @OussamaHamrouni 2 роки тому +83

    Small question about the calculations for 50 years cost of ownership, did you keep the depreciation in the calculations? Because the depreciation has a curve and cars usually depreciate up to a point then stagnate for a while. Was that taken into consideration?

    • @HeadsetHistorian
      @HeadsetHistorian 2 роки тому +68

      Almost none of the numbers actually make sense.

    • @dh510
      @dh510 2 роки тому +41

      Yeah, this number seems way off and I believe that might be the reason.
      I have only ever owned used cars, the first one, which lasted me for many years, was not even worth what he assumes to be the yearly depreciation.
      According to my observations, an average car loses about 50-60% of its value every 5 years on a logarithmic curve. So buying used cars that are 5 to maybe 8 years old should take a huge chunk out of the total cost of ownership.
      Sure, there might be more maintenance and repairs to deal with, but owning a used car also makes it possible to go to off-brand shops to get the work done or to even do stuff yourself.

    • @OussamaHamrouni
      @OussamaHamrouni 2 роки тому +8

      @@dh510 Yes i agree, i have owned 7 - 8 cars till this point, bought them all used and i made sure i get a good enough deal that when i resell i either don't lose money at all or even win a little ( it's important to mention i only keep the car for 1 to 2 years tops since I'm an enthusiast), and that helped me avoid tbe depreciation all together since cars i buy have already lost a good chunk of their value already and getting a good deal helps a lot.

    • @QiuSe
      @QiuSe 2 роки тому +19

      There was the assumption that you get a new one after a certain time, which would repeat the appreciation cycle again

    • @dustojnikhummer
      @dustojnikhummer 2 роки тому +3

      Also that assumes that depreciation is a factor for you.

  • @roger07ify
    @roger07ify 2 роки тому +9

    "You will not own anything and everything will be rented, and you'll be happy" Thanks Klaus

    • @Amir-jn5mo
      @Amir-jn5mo 2 роки тому +1

      better than you will live your life in debt and sacrifice all your life in an endless cycle of repayment

  • @rajshah5705
    @rajshah5705 2 роки тому +1

    As a single person living in a town in Canada. I do not own a car. I haven't in last 3 years. It has saved me a ton of money. But I feel like I am being held back because of not having a car. The cities and infrastructure is designed for cars only. I feel like moving to a bigger city with better public transportation is the only option.

    • @womp6338
      @womp6338 10 місяців тому

      Same in Australia and I recently caved in and bought a car

  • @AndiKola
    @AndiKola 2 роки тому +12

    I have no idea how "Depreciation" is calculated and the language barrier with specific terms is a bit annoying, as I can't understand everything perfectly, but that number for the Golf doesn't seem to fit.
    If you purchase a new Golf for 33'000€ and you replace it at the "average" replacement cycle every 12 years, that gives you a loss in value of 2750€. Provided that you throw it away for 0€ which usually isn't the case as some people sell their old cars instead of throwing them out.

    • @swgar
      @swgar 2 роки тому +2

      Sell price of 12 year golf is fairly close to zero

    • @tomaszkubiak1011
      @tomaszkubiak1011 2 роки тому +3

      @@swgar I wish, Im looking for a car for my mother and 2010 golf is around 5k euro in Poland. That's around 15% of the original price but almost a one year of ownership as per sums presented in this video.

    • @MrKSW2000
      @MrKSW2000 2 роки тому +1

      @@swgar You are telling me that I will have to pay the guy I will be selling my 21 years old car to? Damn that suck

    • @victor_venema
      @victor_venema 2 роки тому

      Also included is that you could have invested that same sum and made a profit that way.

  • @PatrickP0078
    @PatrickP0078 2 роки тому +11

    I own a VW up! And i do the maintenance my self (oil change, filter change, brake change (including discs and fluid), which makes the car very cheap to run. It only costs me around €60 a year for the oil and filters change and €25 extra for brake pads (€75 in total including the brake discs).
    Monthly i pay €22 for tax and €19 for insurance. Which makes it cheaper to run an up! than an electric bike.

    • @HeadsetHistorian
      @HeadsetHistorian 2 роки тому +9

      The numbers in this video also include 250 euro a year for car wash and 200 a year for navigation lol. it's complete nonsense.

    • @chefnyc
      @chefnyc 2 роки тому +3

      If you paid for your car upfront, you parked your money in something that loses value every year. You need to calculate the opportunity cost (investing that money in something that generates income) and the depreciation cost. Or you may keep the car in the best shape and make your depreciation zero. That means updating every single part of the car over years. That is maintenance cost plus your own labor. And this video is about averages. I am sure not everybody can fix their own car.

  • @fifouefof
    @fifouefof 2 роки тому +74

    Good video, however, I would say it applies for countries where most of cars are bought brand new, i.e. Germany. Where I live (Bulgaria) probably upwards of 90% of cars are bought second hand. It comes as no surprise then that the average age of a car here is somewhere around 17 years. Even in larger cities, most "newer" cars are still around the 6-8 year mark. Most people I know do not change their cars in the 3-7 years span, irregardless if they are well off. Even if you see some high-end car brands like Mercedes, BMW, Porsche and such (talking about newer models or specifications), probably still 90% or more are not bought here brand new, but are imported after they have been driven abroad for around 5 years and their respective lease in that country has ended. As for what the costs are to actually own and run that car - this is actually one of the prime concerns here when buying a car. People really stress on whether the spare parts/repairs are cheap / fuel economy / reliability / actual cost to buy the vehicle. Probably that is the reason there are so many cars from the VAG Group here - virtually similar cars with a high degree of interchangeable parts. And bear in mind that Volkswagen isn't exactly a low-end car. At least here this segment is occupied by the likes of Dacia, Great Wall, Renault, Fiat. Volkswagen and the brands that comprise the group are actually middle to high end segment. Also - I wouldn't call a Golf tiny. It is actually a good representation of the average European's car - hatchback so that you can more easily find a parking space in a densely congested city, enough room for a family of 4 plus luggage, good fuel economy. Think the C-segment actually comprises about 1/5 of sales in Europe, could be wrong though. As for the Corsa - probably could call it tiny, but most people would call it a small city car. Cars like Smart, VW Up and such can be called tiny.

    • @RajPatel-vq6if
      @RajPatel-vq6if 2 роки тому +15

      Your argument might work at a personal level, but not at a systematic level. Someone had to buy those cars brand new so that you could buy it used.

    • @matt69nice
      @matt69nice Рік тому +10

      @@RajPatel-vq6if it still means that on a systemic level cars are not being replaced every 3 years. Someone is still buying them on that regular basis, but presenting that regular basis as the basis for average calculations across the whole population is not valid.

    • @raitis6327
      @raitis6327 Рік тому +2

      Agree from Latvia. Probably in your country car repairs are cheaper than in germany... Old car doesnt have depresation

    • @19sjaak
      @19sjaak Рік тому

      I concur with you on a level of personal costs. However, the (on average) 4600 - 5200 euros that every person subsidises car ownership in Germany still stands (I'm sure the number is different in Bulgaria). The thing is, spending in the order of 5 to 10 times as much on car subsidies compared to public transportation subsidies as a country is a little strange.
      If we transition to for instance sharing a car with a neighbourhood (e.g. ua-cam.com/video/OObwqreAJ48/v-deo.html), you can still use it whenever you need to take your family somewhere, while not feeling the personal cost of ownership, or having all those individual owned cars drive and damage roads, necessitating maintenance costs, expansion of road costs, environmental costs etc.
      We could save a lot as a society this way.

    • @bsandoval2340
      @bsandoval2340 Рік тому

      Sadly the statement 90% of the cars being bought are used is just wrong the ratio can never be more than about 50 50 otherwise there wouldn’t be enough cars to go around

  • @PauL-tr1mn
    @PauL-tr1mn 2 роки тому +7

    For the sake of the argument. It takes me to get to work with a car-40min to 1+hour one way.with public transport it would take me 1,5h with 3 transfers- 2 metro lines and a bus+ walk around 15min-one way.that is if I get on time to all transfers and if it's not full and no traffic for bus.with a bike it would take 2,5hours minimum one way.How do we cash time of your life?2h a day Vs 5h a day.by my simple math I'm saving millions.
    Change is posible-yes in 5 to 9 decades maybe if we take out human from the equation.

    • @jacopochiefjaco123
      @jacopochiefjaco123 2 роки тому

      Then you are not in a city - i.e. not in the 80% of the population. But if you are in a city and commute to another city as the video says, a. be mad at your government that there is no efficient public transport solution, which would be cheaper (and usually faster) than a car; b. be willing to accept high taxes to ensure that the infrastructures and parking are there for you. c. don't get surprises if other people don't want to subsidize this with their taxes

  • @Aliquis.frigus
    @Aliquis.frigus 2 роки тому +40

    The one thing I feel like pointing out is that depreciation on used cars is way less than in new cars, which is what I understood you used for your calculations.
    My car depreciates less than €1000 euros per year, and maintenance is about the same. This are generous estimates. Insurance is about €500 per year. After this, only petrol remains of the direct costs.

    • @korakys
      @korakys 2 роки тому +7

      Yeah, when my car only cost ~1400 euros to begin with and I kept it for 6 years before selling it for ~600 euros... The depreciation costs just aren't a big factor, I'm glad new car buyers exist but I'll never be one myself.

    • @axayd
      @axayd 2 роки тому +13

      Yeah I'm not some car mad guy but this video is completely flawed since it doesn't take used cars into account and just uses averages. You can get really solid 10 year old cars for £1500 and the depreciation would be like £200 a year and the maintenance wouldn't be too costly either if you know what you are doing.

    • @trulyUnAssuming
      @trulyUnAssuming 2 роки тому +6

      Used cars don't magically pop into existence. Someone has to buy the car new. So if we talk about averages for society in total then it is realistic to use new cars. Because someone in society bears these costs so in the end the averages will be alright

    • @Till113
      @Till113 2 роки тому +2

      @@trulyUnAssuming Well most new cars are bought by company for their employees and after 5 years sold cheaply. The company does get a better price because they buy in bulk and can write the cost off to pay less taxes. So at least here in Germany most people who don't get a company car buy a used car...

    • @trulyUnAssuming
      @trulyUnAssuming 2 роки тому +2

      @@Till113 they pay less taxes which means that the tax payer is paying for the car which is everyone. So tell me how we are not paying for brand new cars again? If it weren't for these tax incentives, the companies might give you the money directly instead...

  • @Daddy-sama
    @Daddy-sama 2 роки тому +1

    I live in Berlin and switched from car to motorcycle, because the costs for fuel and the parking issue here in berlin are too dramatic.
    Motorcycle is so much cheaper, you pay much much less taxes and you can park anywhere.

    • @Nerpson
      @Nerpson 2 роки тому

      For now. Cities in France are starting to create paid 2 wheels parking spots and prohibit sidewalk parking. Even as a motorcyclist, i think it's a good thing, we need to stop stealing space from pedestrians and cyclists. That being said, even with this new cost, owning a motorcycle is still way more profitable than owning a car.

  • @be4tnl
    @be4tnl 2 роки тому +6

    So..how does that work out if you buy a 20 year old car (corsa) park it on your own property, do the maintenance yourself and sell/wreck it at 25 years old?
    Only pensioners and companies can afford new cars around here, unless it's an "up".

  • @apexpredator2118
    @apexpredator2118 2 роки тому +4

    All these arguments don't stand anymore if you are a family, live away from public transport and have bad weather half of the year. Also, more than half of this cost includes depreciation. No one thinks of a car as an investment. They know that it's money down the drain, but they still pay for it for the comfort. Any money you get by selling it later is actually bonus money. They same thing can be said about things like furniture, refrigerators etc, you don't but them as an investment, you consider it an expense which you can probably sell for some money after you use it.

    • @darklelouchg8505
      @darklelouchg8505 2 роки тому

      Exactly. I'm all for some improvements to modern transport infastructure, but when the calculations and arguments rest on flawed/deceptive propositions, that is when they lose credibility with me.

  • @S7EVE_P
    @S7EVE_P 2 роки тому +2

    I own an old car. 2009 Ford Mondeo. I'll change it when I can't fix it anymore.

  • @metacob
    @metacob 2 роки тому +68

    I'm not proud of it, but I recently bought a car - last time I had one was 18 years ago. I just got sick of trains being late all the time or often being canceled without any replacement. At peak hours a train car can be filled to the brim with people. Since Germans don't believe in air conditioning, the heat can get insane in the summer - a friend literally got heat stroke last weekend because of this. And then there's the anti-maskers. I just couldn't bear it anymore. I'd definitely ride bikes more often though if I was living in a city that did that well. And I agree with all the points in the video.

    • @ex0stasis72
      @ex0stasis72 2 роки тому +6

      Oh ya, I heard about the trains in Germany during the summer getting way too hot.
      I'm not a big fan of over using AC, but I think it makes sense in areas where a lot of people are at constantly. Maybe if enough people complain and quit taking the train, they'll put AC on them. It's a negative externality, but the alternative is more people driving their own clothing clearance climate controlled cars using much more AC collectively than if they had just put AC on the train.

    • @midwestnagyfa
      @midwestnagyfa 2 роки тому +2

      Wait, Germany's still doing masks? I mean, intellectual honesty I guess, but are the anti-maskers the exception or most people? Legitimate curiosity

    • @sagichdirdochnicht4653
      @sagichdirdochnicht4653 2 роки тому +1

      @@ex0stasis72 Overusing ACs is absolutely stupid. Uncomfortabely cold, massive waste of money and energy.
      *Using* ACs ain't, tough. Especially in trains... I mean in theory our trains are supposed to have AC. However, as explained in the video, the goverment spent all our Tax money on cars for the last 70 or so years.
      Therefore, the train system is absolutely f***ed up. The trains are constantly broken, there isn't enough maintainance personal (or funds to hire more); so staff will focus on the most important things first, because they simply can't fix all.
      I mean I suppose a working engine and breaks are more important then AC; but in summer they should be required to work (seriously, heatstrokes!). And more importantly, there should be enough fundings to keep all trains in 100% working condition constantly, god damn!

    • @metacob
      @metacob 2 роки тому +1

      @@midwestnagyfa It's only mandatory in public transport and doctor's offices (and hospitals of course)... I don't know about exception, but it's not split 50/50

    • @towhee7472
      @towhee7472 2 роки тому +15

      Oh no, those evil anti-maskers! lol.

  • @liondev6460
    @liondev6460 2 роки тому +9

    I'm too lazy to dig through that chart, but it seems like you're implying that every car is scrapped after a maximum lifespan of 12 years. If that's the case, I strongly disagree. Even though the original buyers of most cars usually don't keep them for a long time, the lifespan of cars on average far exceeds 12 years.
    Also, the amount spent on subsidizing cars seems unrealistic. Does a subsidy in this context only include tax money that has actually been spent? Or is a part of this the tax return lump sum for work trips and tax returns for submitted parking tickets?
    (Edit): Please don't take this as hate towards you or the numbers you compiled. I'm genuinely interested.

    • @matthiasmayer7328
      @matthiasmayer7328 2 роки тому

      The biggest "subsidies" the driver never sees in its bank account. It is the streets and the land they occupy that is expensive. E.g. a parking spot with 10 m^2 of land (probably to small) could be worth up to 6 figures in German cities. With a "reasonable" profit expectation that common investors use of 7% p.a. this parking spot should cost 1000 or more € per year. Up till last year any German city could only ask for 30 € for onstreet Parking. So there is already a 1000 € or more the driver never sees

    • @liondev6460
      @liondev6460 2 роки тому

      @@matthiasmayer7328 Do you have any examples for this 30 € onstreet parking fee? As far as I'm aware, onstreet parking is 6€/hour at best in all of the larger cities. And even if you only pay for 2 hours per day that would come down to 4320€/year.

    • @johanmetreus1268
      @johanmetreus1268 2 роки тому +1

      @@matthiasmayer7328 , those investor expectations are way too high, as most mature branches operate with profit margins of 1-4%.
      Also consider how the existence of those parking lots does to the value of the surrounding properties, or rather, how the lack of roads and parking spaces would influence the value. Point isn't that you are right or wrong, but that it is much more complex when taking a closer look at it. What would for instance be the net result of value if the parking spaces between road lane and pavement was replaced with some other means of transportation, like a conveyer pavement or low-speed mini-trams like in amusement parks?

  • @berlin-y5l
    @berlin-y5l Рік тому +1

    sold my car few weeks ago and i am so happy! the car was just standing weeks long in the middle of berlin (s bahn nordbahnhof 10115) and was just sucking money for parking, taxes, insurance, future tüv ... now im back to carsharing when necessary or just bicycle!

  • @patrik5123
    @patrik5123 2 роки тому +110

    I did a calculation for me here in Sweden, and my total cost/year for a large Jeep plugin hybrid, is about to €8000. I'm also including (several types of) road taxes & parking in that, estimated rather safely.
    Our public transportation is essentially garbage. It's also all different systems everywhere, so getting one of those "travel wherever you'd like", just doesn't exist. Hell, just going to the _next town over_ means a new company to buy a ticket from. UGH.
    Also, you should make a collab with Economics Explained on this ;)

    • @kapoioBCS
      @kapoioBCS 2 роки тому +13

      Sweden’s public transportation is not garbage ffs 🤦🏼‍♂️

    • @patrik5123
      @patrik5123 2 роки тому +13

      @@kapoioBCS Oh really? Let's ask the public what they think of SJ for example. Or Västtrafik, or one of the other companies operating. And we would have to ask about them all separately, because none of them work well together.
      Instead of having a state-owned entity responsible for ALL of our public transportation, every person needs to deal with a multitude of companies just to get from one area to another. Nah, it's shit mate. Especially when you start comparing to Germany or Japan.

    • @موسى_7
      @موسى_7 2 роки тому +4

      The idea is that the video motivates improving public transport.
      A video for voters and governments, not changing individual lifestyle.
      Imagine a city like Baghdad with absolutely no buses. Yeah, this video wouldn't be good advice for them.

    • @Nithalm
      @Nithalm 2 роки тому +4

      Sweden is quite a large country. If you're not living and working in the same city, then a car is almost mandatory. It works the same in the Netherlands, although public transport will work if you're lucky enough to live nearby train stations, which IS the case for a large enough majority of people. But if you live in a village far away from direct access to a city train station, then you have to jump over to bus stations, etc etc. And that suck.
      It suck even more if you have to switch trains between different train oprators. Didn't know it's like that in Sweden, but at some trajects in the Netherlands it's the same, but these other operators are only active in small(and rather remote) parts of the country. Majority of the people in Netherlands do not have to deal with that. But I can imagine that it would put ANOTHER drempel to going with public transport.

    • @Hypernerdwithcam
      @Hypernerdwithcam 2 роки тому +2

      @@patrik5123 as someone that takes the bus often in västra Götaland - the public transport is ok. Absolutely not garbage,

  • @austinhernandez2716
    @austinhernandez2716 2 роки тому

    In America, you got no choice but to drive in most areas. Inadequate public transportation, or even no public transportation at all, no sidewalks, no bike lanes, 5 lanes highways that impossible to cross by foot, homes being miles away from a grocery store or even convenience store. This makes it impractical and dangerous to get around with a car. So the demand is inelastic. It's not a true "free market". So price gouging happens as a result.
    What amazes me is that people complain yet get furious when you try to do anything about it.

  • @KL-hd1ic
    @KL-hd1ic 2 роки тому +9

    Bought my car second hand 7000€.
    Car Insurance 300€ per year
    Road tax 150€ per year
    Maintenance 200€ per year
    Road side assistance Insurance 60€ per year
    Fuel 150€ per month (my work pays back 120€)
    Unforseen fees/costs average 50€ per month
    Total cost of ownership excluding depreciation => 1670€ per year. Very cheap!
    When you buy a car second hand it will depreciate much slower then when it was brand new. So the first owner lost the most money when he sold me the car.

    • @BillyBraga
      @BillyBraga 2 роки тому

      I generally agree, but you should include the cost of the car in the annual price... You'd probably keep your 7000€ car 5-10 years, so your total would be about 2700€ per year.

    • @cake5000
      @cake5000 2 роки тому +2

      If it is toyota or honda you won't need another car for 20 years.

    • @BillyBraga
      @BillyBraga 2 роки тому

      @@cake5000 If you bought it 7000 it is probably 10 yo, so you'd keep it 10 more.

    •  2 роки тому

      @@BillyBraga if you keep it for 10 years, it wont suddenly disappear, you still can sell it for a fair amount

    • @BillyBraga
      @BillyBraga 2 роки тому

      @ I know. The calculations in the video do take that into account. It doesn't calculate the amount you buy the car at, only how much less you can sell it every year.

  • @RMTransit
    @RMTransit 2 роки тому +12

    Cars are expensive, and compared to public transit - you have to do all the work!

  • @lazerusmfh
    @lazerusmfh 2 роки тому +1

    Being in an accident in a car is much cheaper than being in an accident on a bike
    Plus I drive 150+ miles a day

  • @DefY0806
    @DefY0806 2 роки тому +12

    What about buying used cars?
    They don't depreciate as much and are way cheaper to begin with

    • @jacopochiefjaco123
      @jacopochiefjaco123 2 роки тому

      S o c i e t a l c o s t s

    • @derick1697
      @derick1697 2 роки тому +1

      If he did that then math would not be as convincing and won't get the conclusion he wants

  • @jimmiejohnsson2272
    @jimmiejohnsson2272 2 роки тому +13

    I live in a city that is at least on paper great at public transport - Stockholm. I've lived there for many years without a car just using busses and the metro. I've also recently moved to a less central part where I need to rely on busses and commuting trains. I got a cheap new car (a Dacia for about 14k euro) couple of years ago and having lived now both with and without I can say that it is a great increase in quality of life having your own car. I live with my girlfriend and we are now able to, with ease and at free will travel to more remote parts of the city very comfortably. We can also travel the rest of Sweden very easy and comfortably. We can visit friends in the city late at night without feeling unsafe riding at night time in the metro. Grocery shopping is so much easier now that we got the car as well. I pay a lot of tax for "things I dont use", but in the end those things attract skilled and passionate people who will want and demand these things. Estimating the true added benefit of services and things is usually highly complicated (which this video sort of to me highlights un-attentionaly by talking about the "insane cost" of cars and trying to pit people against each other because one group dosent wanna pay for that thing they happen to not be personally using). What is the value of an all-night open grocery store, a café that serves special tea only or a popular night club? Dont be so quick to be the one who demands that something you happen to not like being banned - you just might get it and the city you loved might turn into a place you no longer like being in when those people you were so keen on denying their needs up and left

    • @elfulan0
      @elfulan0 2 роки тому +5

      This is exactly what I was thinking. The video does seem to want to pit people with opposing views against each other. In addition, it is presented from a very monolithic perspective. People have other circumstances apart from those mentioned in the video, which to me, are idyllic. First-world country, great public infrastructure, less corrupt governments, relatively low levels of crime....Yet, even in a place like Stockholm, crime is something that would deter someone from taking public transit. The convenience of a car is undeniable. Why does it have to be so black and white? Why not promote a combination of cars that are better for the environment and better public transportation?

    • @alexandervanslooten5016
      @alexandervanslooten5016 2 роки тому +1

      Exactly. Basically, what you're summarising refers to the social benefits of car ownership, which are much greater than the social benefits of bicycle ownership or public transport, simply because bikes don't get you very far and public transport will not get you to many destinations and is much less versatile than a car. These social benefits of the various transportation modes were completely ignored in this video.

  • @BlackPanthaa
    @BlackPanthaa 2 роки тому +17

    The issue here is people wasting their cars, buy a car and keep it longer than a year lol

    • @lesterroberts1628
      @lesterroberts1628 10 місяців тому

      Yes. However I have dug deeper. If you examine fleet vehicles you notice they are very new. There's a fine line to draw between increasing repair costs versus paying for massive depreciation and fewer repair bills. I'm sure if old cars were more affordable, profit motivated capitalists would maximize earnings by keeping fleet vehicles for longer than a few years

    • @rokaspleckaitis8924
      @rokaspleckaitis8924 9 місяців тому +1

      @@lesterroberts1628 You can use a car for 10 years easily and the used car market is a testament to that

    • @lesterroberts1628
      @lesterroberts1628 9 місяців тому

      @@rokaspleckaitis8924 of course. Nothing is stopping people from using cars for 10+ years.

  • @rinu123
    @rinu123 2 роки тому +8

    The amount of time lost in a day would be massive relying on just public transport. And if I happen to miss my only bus I'm just not going anywhere.

    • @zea_64
      @zea_64 2 роки тому +3

      Sounds like an infrastructure problem. When governments invest in public transportation it gets faster and more reliable.

    • @hung-upear2659
      @hung-upear2659 2 роки тому +1

      I agree with Conner here+ personally I use the time in public transport, especially in longer trips, to read, concentrate on music or play games, which isn't really possible in cars

    • @Alex-mc5yn
      @Alex-mc5yn 2 роки тому

      ​@@zea_64 , I come from a country with an incredibly good public transport that had it since USSR times. I still spent roughly 3 hours a day in a bus just getting from and to highschool and later work, just because of how big the cities are and how prohibitively high the rent in the center was. I could rely on it to function with no delay, sure, but I would much rather have an extra few hours of sleep or me time than be packed into a bus with strangers, risking being groped or have my wallet stolen again.
      You couldn't get much faster with the public transport there, unless you tried to build a subway in granite-based city (good luck) or demolished a district's worth of buildings to build another branch of conventional railway. Also, I was by no means rural or even suburban, in fact, I lived in the city's largest district.

  • @williambonadurer9750
    @williambonadurer9750 2 роки тому +16

    I sold my car last year, my mom said I wasn’t going to save any money. She only was thinking about my insurance and gas cost which was less than half the vehicle costs.

  • @dizzy8175
    @dizzy8175 2 роки тому +2

    1.5 million dollars for owning a car for 60 years? Give me a break. In America there are people earning under the poverty line (20,000 dollars per year), and they drive a car. That person earns around 800,000 dollars in his life time. I'm sure he spends double his lifetime earning, just on his car..... lol.

  • @NxS96
    @NxS96 2 роки тому +28

    I think the Bahncard100(which I assume you meant by "all inclusive ticket") also allows you to take local transport. If so, at 6:16 you shouldn't add the 978€ on top.

  • @haydennorris2913
    @haydennorris2913 2 роки тому +1

    I live in a low density population area with no real public transport. I commute to Detroit 60 miles away everyday. There is no public transport. Not even a bus I could take. I had to buy a new car to reliably do this and gas cost a fortune. Maintenance and tax on it is rough too. I am a scientist in a somewhat specialized field which means I have to commute to a bigger city to do my work. I know people who commute even further than me everyday. 1 in 5 detroiters commute more than 50 miles every day. This system is broken. Car is the only option here. Yes there is gridlock traffic. Yes its making a poor city even poorer. No, the politicians won't approve high speed commuter rail.

  • @coakersme
    @coakersme 2 роки тому +68

    Another very interesting video by Marton, I really enjoy his insights and videos. However, although I generally agree with him that owning cars is much more expensive that the users may perceive. However, I believe that this video, or the presented calculations at the very least, are simply wrong and untrue:
    1. A product can depreciate a 100% of its value, after which it's considered to be fully depreciated.
    Therefore, it's incorrect to count absolute currency values of yearly depreciation, and even more incorrect to accumulate them over a reasonable expected product lifetime. Even if we were to consider the currency amounts of the face value, the cumulative depreciation should never go beyond the cumulative price paid for the car, adjusted for the inflation of course.
    2. If you look into the expense of buying a car (or paying a monthly car installment to the bank, or whatever) as an investment - and not every expense, by any means, should be looked at as an investment - than you should also consider every other expense mentioned in the video (buying a bike or purchasing a train pass) also as an investment, and see how much of it's value has depreciated over time, just by the inflation if nothing else. The math would then have showed a different outlook, but that doesn't change the main flaw with this argument - that not every expense should be treated as an investment, since the mass majority of people would not even begin to know how to invest successfully - in terms of adding value with their cash over time.
    Again, I generally agree with his bottom-line opinion that the true cost of owning a car is usually hidden, but the estimates given in this video, as well as numerous other sources on the Web are essentially flawed and plain incorrect. Nonetheless, I will continue to the TechAltar as it's one of the most insightful and entertaining channels out there.

    • @nikoleigraham8747
      @nikoleigraham8747 2 роки тому +4

      Some cars appreciate in value, right?

    • @jonathanodude6660
      @jonathanodude6660 2 роки тому

      how is your second point a criticism of the video?

    • @linksys813
      @linksys813 2 роки тому +7

      LOL none of that makes sense. Cars are just expensive to own and maintain. Period. You could argue in favor of EVs being more practical and economical but it still doesn't take away from the fact that we should move away from a car-centric city design and push more towards public transport, biking and walking means. It's criminal that we have such flawed infrastructure, especially in NA cities and would be even more criminal to not do anything about it. Cars are not an investment

    • @RavenL1337
      @RavenL1337 2 роки тому +3

      @@linksys813 please give me a god damn break with your anti car crap!

    • @linksys813
      @linksys813 2 роки тому +4

      @@RavenL1337 😂😂 it's facts though

  • @etraag
    @etraag 2 роки тому +1

    Infrastructure is paid for regardless of whether or not you own a car. My used car that I bought for 1000,- and that will last me 8 years doesn't depreciate with these insane numbers. A lof of clear mistakes

  • @Jesse-2531
    @Jesse-2531 2 роки тому +18

    As someone wit 6 years (50km a day)of biking experience, and a body demanding job. I am so happy that I switched to car. Riding the bike no matter wot, mate me kom to work completely wet and Exhausted. And wen I got home I had no energy left fore anything. And dont forget the time savings wen the distance is over 15km. And at least 2 cars a day were Trying to kill me🤫. No thx.

  • @jlevin60
    @jlevin60 2 роки тому +64

    Hey long time viewer of the channel here that also lives in Berlin. I think some of the personal car costs are a bit extreme. I share a used 3500 euro VW Up with my partner and our yearly costs are under 1500 euros, as we try to take transit and bike as much as possible. I'm also in favor of less cars clogging our city, and parking costs need to be increased dramatically. I think taking the most extreme scenario and extrapolating it to be the average takes the teeth out of the argument a bit. But let's keep that anti-car sentiment flowing! I'm happy to pay considerably more than I do to use our roads, and let's bring public transit costs down for everyone.

    • @leonardotansil1643
      @leonardotansil1643 2 роки тому +8

      I think a huge chunk of the costs he mentioned was related to depreciation of new cars :)

    • @hellofellowkids2817
      @hellofellowkids2817 2 роки тому +7

      He has all the calculations on a spreadsheet you can go check there and tell what he calculated wrong

    • @bhugh
      @bhugh 2 роки тому +1

      Yes, I agree that people who stick with buying older used cars can cut the cost quite significantly. The cost of the last half of a car's lifetime is far, far lower (to the consumer) than the first half. Maybe 1/10th the total cost?
      Back in the day, here in the U.S., you could buy an older used car for $1000 or so, count on spending $1000/year in repair and maintenance, and then of course you have the regular fuel costs.
      That's one way people on the lower end of the economic spectrum get along.
      Since 2008 or so, with the used car buy-back program, and now with Covid disruption, the days of the $1000 used car are gone. You might have to buy more a $5000 or even $10,000 car instead of $1000. But then it will definitely last you 5-10 years with some care. So the economics might be a little worse now, but the same basic plan still works.
      (Of course this doesn't help with the social, environmental, and other costs of car ownership - in fact it worsens them, to a degree, because older cars pollute more, burn more fuel, etc.)

    • @fourthpanda
      @fourthpanda 2 роки тому +1

      Glad I'm not the only one who thought that! Thank you for the comment.

    • @fourthpanda
      @fourthpanda 2 роки тому +3

      @@bhugh 5k-10k is insane lol. You can still get a used car for $2000 that is plenty good. Just have to know what to watch out for.

  • @syntheee
    @syntheee 2 роки тому +1

    My Skoda Fabia, which is smaller than a VW Golf, cost 13.500 Euros (EU-reimport). Tax: 36 Euros, insurance (for 15.000 km/year): 320 Euros, Fuel: 1300 Euros. It is now five years old and apart from regular servicing (less than 300 Euros per year so far) there were no repairs at all necessary. I want to use the car for another five years. After ten years the car will be worth about 3.000 Euros (very conservative estimate), so depreciation is about 1000 Euros per year. Of course the maintenance costs will increase (new sets of winter tires, summer tires and brakes at least). But I don't see how the yearly costs could be any higher than about 3500-4000 Euros.
    Public transport is only a good alternative if you live in a big city - at least in Germany. The car saves me more than an hour on my daily commute so it's worth it.

  • @BillyBraga
    @BillyBraga 2 роки тому +22

    Like others mention, I think you should have added the used car option in the calculations. It's a lot cheaper than new cars.
    Also, as NJB mentions in his comment, most North American cities aren't designed for public transport, so owning a car is pretty much required.

    • @gondolagripes1674
      @gondolagripes1674 2 роки тому +1

      My car cost $2500 in 2019 and I've spent just under $200 in 3 years for maintenance. It's not that hard to cheap the fuck out with a little mechanical skill and save a ton of money. And yeah, I walk to work and take public transportation, hell I literally work for a public transportation system. Cars are only expensive when you make them expensive.

    • @BillyBraga
      @BillyBraga 2 роки тому +1

      @@robierahg17 I agree about the inflation part, but he does account for getting rid of the car, since he counts the depreciation (initial - depreciation = resell)

    • @jonathanodude6660
      @jonathanodude6660 2 роки тому

      north america is 3 countries out of like 200 my dude.

    • @jonathanodude6660
      @jonathanodude6660 2 роки тому

      @@gondolagripes1674 depending on where you live, insurance is mandatory, and that insurance goes up if you dont get it serviced at reputable places very often. also the video was about new cars. I dont know any new car going for 2.5k. most people dont cheap out on their cars either. if youre buying it because its mandatory, then sure, get the best deal and work on it yourself. but most people dont do that and some even see their car as a status symbol and a lot care about how it looks to others. in that situation, theyre paying a hell of a lot more. we arent talking minimums here, were talking averages. you being lower than the average doesnt change what that average is.

  • @junman5419
    @junman5419 2 роки тому +10

    I think inflation and depreciation were used in accurately in this video. You can't add dollars from today with dollars from a year from now, from two years from now, etc. Therefore inflation shouldn't scale because everything scales. Depreciation also looks too high.
    My calculations
    Owning a car for 60 years and calculating everything in terms of PRESENT dollars
    Buying new $30000 car every 5 years. You lose 60% of value after 5 years so you're spending $18000 every 5 years for a new car after trade in. Round to $20000 for other fees/inflation in car prices (probably overestimate).
    12 five year periods * $20000/ five year period = *$240,000*
    insurance+maintenance+gas+registration/year = $5868
    insurance+maintenance+gas+registration for 60 years = *$352080*
    total cost after 60 years: *$592080 in PRESENT dollars* MUCH less than ≈$1500000
    Inflation shouldn't be used against you because you will likely keep up with inflation through wages increases and investments.
    Moral of the story: Be careful when adding money from different years. A promise for a dollar a year from now is not the same as a dollar in your hands right now. Time value of money!

    • @onzaueb
      @onzaueb 2 роки тому

      More than $4000 yearly without it being moved...jeez.

    • @lukasausen
      @lukasausen 2 роки тому

      yes 500K from today, but you will be spending more and more on insurance+maintenance+gas+registration every year because of inflation+car buy, youre actually lowering the amount you WOULD spend, bringing for a present value wich is false, youre keeping depretiation a fixed value as if a 2060 car that would cost say 40K instead of 30K would depreciate less than a car today, makes no sence, and youre not acounting for the car changing value, and i agree with you that bringing for a present value will bring more of a "true" understanding of your expenses but in actuallity no investment is calculated in present value, so bringing to present value brings no benefit other than a better visualization of expenditure. because in order to understand if youre going to save money by not using a car you have to use future value, from your income to investments that you could make with the money, to the depretiation and expenses. also its much better for people that have a unreliable source of money, like third party artists or small shop owners to understand how much they would have to """"""increase"""""" sales/prices in order to keep up with the car( i know you dont actually need i guess you understand my point)

  • @TheSteinbitt
    @TheSteinbitt 6 місяців тому

    Problem with public transport is that it doesn’t leave from where you are, it doesn’t take you to where you need to go, and it only leaves a couple of times per hour or day.

  • @barry1035
    @barry1035 2 роки тому +6

    Lots of good points that I agree with here, but I have serious doubts about how the lifetime cost of owning a car is calculated. It's assuming people are repeatedly buying brand-new cars, which is not the norm in any European country. People who buy brand-new cars are either very wealthy or they've been tricked into financing a car they can't afford, which normally comes with a large payment at the end of 2 years that pushes those people to refinance again for another brand-new car. But most people don't do this. Even wealthy people who might brand-new often keep that same car for quite a long time.
    Most people buy used cars. If you buy a 5-10 year old car every 5-10 years, there's no way you'll be looking at a lifetime cost like with the VW Golf example.

  • @Michael_Schumacher
    @Michael_Schumacher 2 роки тому +27

    I also noticed that people vastly underestimate their TCO, since they often only look at gas prices. But you can significantly reduce your yearly costs by buying used and smart. My Ford Focus '15 Diesel has cost per km of around 0,19-0,22ct/km and in 5,5 years of ownership it cost me around 15.000€ (not including the purchase price but the depreciation). Another point I want to mention is the city argument @ 16:22. By definition I live in a small city in Germany, but that doesn't make the ÖPNV at all comparable to big cities like Berlin. We don't nearly enough have the same amount of train/bus connections and even that what we have really dies down at evening/night. A recent example would be from visiting a friend in Stuttgart. On my way back home I actually took 3 hours to get back home (normal is 1.5 hours). Due to full and late trains I took substantially more time. This is not acceptable when in contrast Google Maps shows me under 40min for the same route via car.

    • @jeanf6295
      @jeanf6295 2 роки тому +2

      To buy used and smart, someone must have paid a good chunk of the new and expensive price though.
      The Deutche Bahn being unreliable kinda falls under point 5 of the video.
      The not just bike video on Switzerland trains shows that city size does not matter that much when it comes to rail infrastructure. Low density urban sprawl is a nightmare to service, but villages and small urban centers can be efficiently connected by regional rail.

    • @jacopochiefjaco123
      @jacopochiefjaco123 2 роки тому

      I agree with what Jean f says - check Not Just Bikes video to get a proper response to your post.

  • @UltraCookie3000
    @UltraCookie3000 2 роки тому +1

    Time. Time is the biggest reason why public Transport in Canada kinda sucks. A 20 Min car ride is a 1h 15min bus/train ride where I live. The difference is terrible if you need to get somewhere fast and on short notice.

  • @RadialSeeker113
    @RadialSeeker113 2 роки тому +18

    Another argument I have is buying a 5yr old used car that's depreciated by 50% already. Especially if it's well maintained. A car from 2017 isn't very different from brand new cars.

    • @krystofpavlis4407
      @krystofpavlis4407 2 роки тому +1

      Or even older than that! I'm lucky that I know a fair bit about cars, and so I love the option of finding something 15-30 years old that's in good condition for less than $3000, and basically driving it until it no longer makes financial sense to maintain it :D

    • @DanKaschel
      @DanKaschel 2 роки тому +3

      In order to buy a used car, someone first had to buy that car new.

    • @chefnyc
      @chefnyc 2 роки тому

      And somebody else needs to pay “more” as depreciation cost.

    • @santerihiitola
      @santerihiitola 2 роки тому +1

      That doesn't help with the cost to society

    • @QiuSe
      @QiuSe 2 роки тому +1

      I got a car from 2005 that uses 4l per 100km if you drive a bit more "conservative". No major problems or any downsides compared to new cars

  • @androgyne_sander
    @androgyne_sander Рік тому

    Some remarks:
    - Costs of owning and driving a car differs per country. Same applies to public transport. Germany has exceptional low cost public transport.
    - Most consumers who own a car own an used car (so less depreciation) that's paid off (well at least in Europe) and (realistically) don't do all the maintenance and repairs on their used car, which all translates in less costs.
    - Housing in a city costs more (you pay more for a square meter). You can not compare a tiny apartment in a city with a villa in the countryside if you need the additional space (for your family, pets, hobbies, work etc.). Moreover in some cities it's nearly impossible to find a decent affordable place to live e.g. Amsterdam. How do you calculate that in the costs of public transport?
    - It costs more time to get from A to B with public transport if you don't live inside a city. Furthermore public transport usually doesn't bring you to the front door, so you need to calculate in additional time and/or costs for that.
    - I don't know how you go grocery shopping, but I'm glad that I only have to go once a week, because I own a car that I can fill up with several bags. Saves times. Yes, you can do that online, but you need to stay at home when the delivery takes place.
    - Public transport can be very unreliable at times, resulting in coming late or too early at appointments, which costs time and money. Yes, cars can be stuck in a traffic jam, but even in the crowded Netherlands I almost never have more than half a hour delay. Public transport on the other hand when things go south..
    - Driving a car when you are tired (e.g. after work) is very relaxing. No need to hurry, no need to fight for a place to sit, no need to breathe in all the pollution, smoke of cigarettes, joints and what not.
    - With my car I can go anywhere at any time I want. The beach, forest, family, friends, vacation. I can collect cheap stuff found on the internet. Furthermore I like being in control of the vehicle with which I travel. I feel safe. What's the opportunity cost of all that when I choose public transport?

  • @desmond3107
    @desmond3107 2 роки тому +38

    As a Berliner and a guy with two jobs. I mainly conmute on my cycle for the most part. It has given me a sense of freedom that I absolutely love. Although we have kindda good bike lanes here (compared to India, my home country) there is a lot of work to be done.

    • @mcbmghome
      @mcbmghome 2 роки тому

      Americans are too fat for that to be possible. Homeless people ruin public transportation also.

    • @myhonorwasloyalty
      @myhonorwasloyalty 2 роки тому +5

      You aint berliner.

    • @MegaSockenschuss
      @MegaSockenschuss 2 роки тому +2

      @@myhonorwasloyalty Damn right! If you aren't born here, you're just a annoying tourist.

    • @nikoolay
      @nikoolay 2 роки тому

      @@myhonorwasloyalty you do realize that people get INTEGRATED into society. Such racist... Western garbage as we call you around here.

    • @MoonOvIce
      @MoonOvIce 2 роки тому +1

      @@myhonorwasloyalty Does that really matter to you?

  • @itsjayswelly
    @itsjayswelly Рік тому +1

    Glad to see more people realizing that cars are not a necessity and there should be options for those who don't want to drive or own a car. People that want to drive are already catered to everywhere, let's help out the folks that want to move differently

  • @nalbakri
    @nalbakri 2 роки тому +18

    I actually agree with you on most of your points, except for one: weather. The country I live in is a mid-income tropical one meaning hot and humid weather. This completely negates cycling and walking to work if you have an office job, well unless you are lucky enough to have an employer that installed showers at your workplace. A couple of years ago, our capital city had a mayor who was into cycling so he went all out to installimg bike lanes all over the place that now it is possible to cycle anywhere in our city safely. He set up tax incentives for employers and workers, organised promotional rides and went as far as giving out free bikes. Several years on, aside from a few foreign labourers and the odd westerner, the bike lanes are mostly unused. I'm not arguing for car use mind you, I fully believe public transportation is the way to go, especially for my city. Personally, I'm lucky enough to live next to a metro station and use that whenever I need to commute.

    • @موسى_7
      @موسى_7 2 роки тому

      People think bikes are so much more important than transit. No, the metro is best.
      In some Muslim countries, women can't cycle. So they ride trains to protect their hijab because cycling reveals the shape of the body.

    • @naydsoe27
      @naydsoe27 2 роки тому +1

      Ok? so what about trams? trains? light rail?

    • @Vnifit
      @Vnifit 2 роки тому +1

      What city are you from?

    • @ElAndresRodriguez
      @ElAndresRodriguez 2 роки тому +2

      @@naydsoe27 Very high cost to build, not as flexible for most people, and cost of maintaining them is high as well.

    • @nalbakri
      @nalbakri 2 роки тому

      @@naydsoe27 Yes to all.. Lol.. My home city has both and LRT and MRT systems. Problem is that we don't have enough stops though but I realise it costs quite a bit of scratch to set up a new line or add more stops. I love trams, one the cheapest forms of public transportation but sadly they don't seem to be too popular in the developing world. We have on BRT line (bus rapid transit) but for whatever reason we didn't build any more.

  • @GamerZone895
    @GamerZone895 2 роки тому +2

    You count depreciation as a cost, you do not need to pay extra money for it if you have a 60 year old golf. Let's say you bought it for 30k 60 years ago, yes you won't be able to sell it for 30k now but you can still sell it for like 3k

  • @nuloom
    @nuloom 2 роки тому +8

    as a student in Den Haag in the Netherlands, I pay about 60€ per month for tram travel every month, plus a few trips to Amsterdam and back over the year set me back about 100€, double that for some other misc train travel. For 55€/month I could get anywhere in and around the centre of Den Haag for free, which is a great option for winters to reduce being in the cold. That's already a lot of money to me given that I don't have a reliable income yet. I can't even imagine how expensive it'd be to own a car, with all the fees, maintenance, insurance, not to mention the price of buying one in the first place. Not to mention I could probably cut my travel in half just by getting a bike which I still haven't done, which would've been smart if only I were smart. To be honest, I have no clue how people can afford to study in places where they have to have a car.

    • @Twiggy163
      @Twiggy163 2 роки тому

      Can you imagine how expensive it would be if users of the Dutch public transport system would pay the actual cost of their ticket? Public transport users only pay 30 to 50% of what a ticket actualy costs. The rest is subsidized by the government.

    • @nuloom
      @nuloom 2 роки тому

      @@Twiggy163 not unlike cars, which, as explained in the video, can cost a state upwards of 10k € per car per year through various subsidies, on top of the ridiculous costs a person bears themselves. If all the people in the netherlands had to bear the full cost of their cars to society, perhaps enough people would drop cars for the dutch government to save enough on car infrastructure to make all of the transit free like it is in Luxembourg and still be better off for it! Matching a 1-2k euro cost is not the same as matching a 10k euro cost.

    • @Twiggy163
      @Twiggy163 2 роки тому

      @@nuloom Quite the opposite.
      With the taxes put on the purchase and ownership of cars, the tax income is vastly greater than the expenditure. You should have a look at the national budget (Rijksbegroting).
      If car owners only had to pay for what it actualy costs to maintain the roads and compensate healthcare for the emissions, car drivers would have a massive tax break.

    • @nuloom
      @nuloom 2 роки тому

      @@Twiggy163 the 2 things you listed are hardly the only costs of car ownership. What about insurance and fuel and car maintenance? what about hearing loss associated with noise pollution, land underpriced used for parking spaces (since there must always be more parking spaces than cars), medical costs associated with cars being one of the most dangerous modes of transportation, not just in terms of pollution but actual accidents, and that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Not to mention you’re insinuating compensating healthcare for the emissions, rather than the emissions themselves. What about the rising need of costly water infrastructure and plenty of other problems, some of which can be priced, others cannot; the decrease of property value in depressed areas due to air congestion, destruction of natural ecosystems, and complete destruction of some land areas near sea level? This video gives you figures for how much an average car costs the state in Germany. Now, it’d be weird if the statistics didn’t include the tax from those cars collected by the said exact state, but even if it didn’t, according to the other provided figures, the tax would have to be several hundred percent of the car’s actual cost to compensate for the expenses.
      One other thing is that public transit, when free, actually reduces its maintenance costs due to having no need for ticket systems. Luxembourg gained money by making their transit entirely free for everyone and ticketless because the amount collected from tickets was smaller than actual maintenance costs of the ticket system. Frankly, it’s not a surprise cars are so expensive. Almost 2 tonnes on average in weight to only transport an average of 1.3 people. The average bus weighs 12-16 tonnes, and has an average of 1500-2500 pppvpd (people per vehicle per day). Even if we assume the bus journey to be 100 times longer than the car’s (which is very generous for the car, and likely a more realistic figure would be 10-30), it still is better at worst and almost twice as efficient at best at transporting people per kg of mass. This does not include any external costs like much more maintenance needed for a corresponding amount of cars, and the whole rest of stuff I mentioned already. So forgive me for not seeing those tax breaks you’re talking about. At least not in context of public transit, which clearly costs way less per person in developed areas that also don’t have a system of transportation that sucks.

    • @Twiggy163
      @Twiggy163 2 роки тому

      @@nuloom what are you talking about? If you want to list ALL those costs, you may also want to add the economic benefits the car has brought society. Otherwise you're just blindly painting yourself a 1 sided story.
      In conclusion, this video only holds half truths and your beloved public transport is subsidized by car drivers.
      Also, what makes you think making public transport free 'greatly' reduces maintenance cost? By far most of the cost is in the trains and the railway, not in the ticket system.
      If you're not seeing the tax breaks, it means you havent looked at the national budget. Which makes your entire comment... rather pointless and at some points its way beyond the scope of cars.

  • @C.A.1247
    @C.A.1247 2 роки тому +6

    Thanks for this video! As others have stated, your numbers are a bit off for 2 reasons:
    1.
    You can buy a used compact car and get away with much lower costs! For example: You can get a 2018 golf with 40k km for 14.000€. I will assume 10k km p.a. (If someone does more than that, they will be even less inclined to go solely public).
    So this would be my estimate:
    - 10% Depreciation: 1.146€ (on average over 5 years)
    - Gas at 1,75€/L: 1.050
    - Insurance (Vollkasko, SF5, HUK): 336€
    - Tax: 80€
    - Maintenance: 500€ (generous estimate)
    - TÜV: 60€ (120€ every two years)
    - Tires: 150€ (600€ every 4 years)
    - Others (parking, washing etc): 178€ (to make the total number even)
    This is 3.500€ per year. A lot of money, but less than half of your number… And it includes the convenience of not having to struggle with public transport and car sharing…
    2.
    Your comparison value (cost of public transport) misses the cost for multiple persons. Families would have to buy multiple tickets, whereas a single family car often suffices…
    So, yeah, as much as I would love less cars on the road, your math is a bit off…
    In conclusion: I REALLY don’t want to come off as rude, but I think this video doesn’t hold up to your high standard of research, as your “Story Behind” series…

    • @crytocc
      @crytocc 2 роки тому

      Some counter-corrections:
      1. Used cars tend to have _far_ higher maintenance costs (which people also routinely underestimate) than new cars, because many parts are nearing the end of their lifespan. Fuel costs tend to be higher (sometimes significantly so) due to worse fuel economy compared to a modern compact car. Depending on where you are, it may cost (relatively) more to insure. Overall, a used car can easily end up being more expensive than a new one, once you take all of the costs into account.
      2. In many places, 'group tickets' of some kind exist for public transport, providing discounts to families, groups of friends, children accompanied by an adult, and so on.

    • @SaHaRaSquad
      @SaHaRaSquad 2 роки тому

      Regarding tickets for families: children and elderly people often get discounts depending on where you live. And with public transport the child might be able to go alone to wherever they need instead of having a parent drive them back and forth. And if we take it to the extreme and make all public transport free like suggested in the video all this would be irrelevant and still cheaper overall.

    • @jacopochiefjaco123
      @jacopochiefjaco123 2 роки тому +1

      Yes, but the social costs still remain. And they are far from irrelevant.

    • @C.A.1247
      @C.A.1247 2 роки тому

      @@crytocc - You are right on point 2, but it was not covered in the video at all…
      On point 1 though, I have to object. Buying a young used car (3-5 years) is almost always cheaper than buying new. This is what myself as well as friends and family have been doing for decades! In my experience, only after the age of 10 years, modern cars require more serious repairs. That’s obviously a generalization, in individual cases there might be some bad luck, but generally, repair costs in the years 4-10 are very reasonable…
      And when you say, used cars are less fuel efficient: Not necessarily… A 4 year old car is often times still current generation…

    • @C.A.1247
      @C.A.1247 2 роки тому

      @@jacopochiefjaco123 - I never said anything about social costs, only commented on the private costs. But if social costs are inflated in the same way… hmm…

  • @tjackman
    @tjackman 2 роки тому +1

    My mum has been using the same Toyota Corolla for 10 years. She got it for about $2500 usd back in 2012. Repairs cost next to nothing, id estimate less than $300 a year. I do the repairs too so thats just counting parts. Gas can be expensive but this thing also gets good mileage too. Not everyone is buying brand new expensive cars and replacing them frequently. Most people buy older used cars and treat them well.

    • @roy1299
      @roy1299 2 роки тому +1

      In the video he explained the hidden costs. Take a look at it and not just at the facade (counting repairs other externalities)

    • @RawbLV
      @RawbLV 2 роки тому

      Toyotas are reliable, other brands are not. Also very few work on their own cars.

  • @hassanhammo3542
    @hassanhammo3542 2 роки тому +13

    I have strongly disagree
    I live and work also in Germany
    But i live on the country side about 40 km from Göttingen
    I have a family
    Yes i could use public transport but that means more time on the road Rother than being with my family resting
    Plus for a household where both are employed and have kids a tow car is almost a must
    U have to be flexible if any emergency happens and u have to pick the kids up
    Yes owning a car is most definitely expensive
    And i think ur Mathe is correct but u re not Factoring other reasons to own a Car

    • @TechAltar
      @TechAltar  2 роки тому +8

      As I said in the video, owning a car definitely makes sense for a lot of people depending on where they live and what family / work situation they have. It can even make sense financially. I just think we should give real alternatives to people who don't live like that, and we should fund them properly

  • @builder3654
    @builder3654 2 роки тому +16

    This was so good! I live in the United States and I can definitely relate to the high car expenses. I would honestly use public transportation but I live in a smaller town of around 30,000 and public transport isn't that good. I would love to see more videos like this!

    • @cyberstonks
      @cyberstonks 2 роки тому

      How about an e-bike then? There are even bikes including 2 big batteries so capacity shouldn't be an issue.

    • @michaeltagor4238
      @michaeltagor4238 2 роки тому +1

      @@cyberstonks did you seriously thought the US of A this guy is living in - which their public transportation system have zero resemblance to a 'good' public transport system - have a decent infrastructure for any kind of biker lol. The whole "damn bikers f*ckin' me up" culture generally is held strongly in the USA y'know

    • @LootFragg
      @LootFragg 2 роки тому

      Something that I'd like to see more is bus taxis. When I lived at the outskirts of Berlin, night bus drivers always stopped wherever it was most convenient for me and some offered to take a detour just to bring me to my doorstep, which I usually declined because I'm okay with 4 minutes of walking. But the concept stuck with me, especially because of how much it potentially helps those who need it -- the elderly, disabled or injured people, people with luggage...
      In areas where you don't need high throughput and more flexibility, small buses could even potentially operate on a call basis, like taxis, but with less emphasis on fast transport and response times and more on the economical side, operating at a level where you are far from needing a tram or fixed bus line. Imagine an app maybe where you tell the system where you want to go at what time and a small bus just goes around picking people up and distributing them to where they want to go, like a ... socialist taxi of sorts, lol. Because I think most of the time in small towns, the problem is not suddenly urgently needing a ride but rather having no idea how to get to places in general.
      It's abstract but just picture how you're effectively planning your work commute and paying a low monthly cost to be picked up from home and brought to your workplace. Add to this a main transport line from village to village so the taxi doesn't have to go cross country (only to the main station) and you'd have yourself a fairly decent public transport for rural areas where there's basically not a lot of people to move.

  • @gambit-6181
    @gambit-6181 2 роки тому +2

    Half of the "cost per year" is depreciation, which is simply not true since the car depreciates massively in value for the first 2 years of use, and is a slow steady depreciation after that.
    You then grouped that depreciation value in for 50 years of use, meaning the car somehow depreciated in value by more than the value of the car itself, which is impossible.
    Both those things are also the wild assumption that the owner did not buy the car second hand, which a lot of sensible people will do at which point the depreciation amount will be minimal. You then also need to factor in the value they get back when selling the car, again, which most people do once they're done with it.
    In addition to this, if you're going to factor in depreciation of an object, whatever object, you kind of need to be consistent with using it for all objects. The moment you ride that fancy bike, it probably depreciated massively in value as it's now considered second hand. Similar to cars, in the most extreme cases, just driving it for the first time can half its value.
    But the argument really is that you haven't "lost" this money because it was already lost when you bought the car. A better way to get a yearly figure is to have the cost of the car itself and split it into the amount of years you will have the car - this would be the best way as we're not factoring in the amount gained for selling, so we're assuming we're keeping hold of the car in this example. So instead of having the insane figure of 3,000 Euro depreciation each year for 50 years (somehow meaning the car cost 150,000 Euros which is simply not true), you should instead get the cost of the car, lets say 30,000 Euros and split that across 50 years, which would come up with a total of 600 Euros per year. Even if we held onto the car for 15 years, as you stated the shelf-life of the car often is, then the figure would be 2,000 for the cost of the car itself spread out across those years (assuming we bought it new), which is still significantly less than the 3,000+ figure in this video.
    I agree that public transport is better for the environment and largely cheaper but the calculations are wildly off and framed as "a conservative estimate" which is incredibly disingenuous, though potentially unintentionally disingenuous.

    • @matthiasroshardt1297
      @matthiasroshardt1297 2 роки тому

      His assumption was that you would replace your car every 7 or so years, so yes, you do indeed go through 150k of depreciation since you're going through 30k*(50/7) ~= 210k worth of cars in that time. However that is under the assumption that you buy new every time.

    • @ER-ml8eb
      @ER-ml8eb 2 роки тому

      ​@@matthiasroshardt1297 a car has to cost like 80k+ new to depreciate by 30k in 7 years! how out of touch with reality do you have to be to believe this? go look at used cars from 2015. you'd be lucky to get them for half of their new price

    • @matthiasroshardt1297
      @matthiasroshardt1297 2 роки тому

      @@ER-ml8eb I think you misunderstood me. I was suggesting you spend ~210k on new cars and recoup 210k - 150k = 60k on selling used cars, working out to an average depreciation of 70% over 7 years per car, which seems in the right ballpark to me.

  • @stipsazg
    @stipsazg 2 роки тому +5

    Interesting thing that you overlooked is that without a proper road network the city that you are living in can not exist. With today's technology a city like Berlin cannot feed or support itself; everything must be shipped in. We absolutely need a bunch of cars and trucks to support us otherwise there will basically be no civilisation as we know it.
    And I'm saying this as someone who absolutely hates cars, noise and pollution.

    • @magnusdagbro8226
      @magnusdagbro8226 2 роки тому

      I don't think that's accurate. There were cities as big and intense as Berlin even before the car.

    • @basil3663
      @basil3663 2 роки тому

      trucks are necessary in our current society for the last little chunk of delivery, but freight trains are still way more efficient than trucks for long-distance transport of goods. also, this video was about cars for personal transport, so im not sure how this is critique applies to it to begin wirh

    • @stipsazg
      @stipsazg 2 роки тому +1

      @@magnusdagbro8226 the fun fact is, it is actually accurate.
      Even after a significant expansion during the industrial revolution, London, which was the largest city in the world by the population back then, was more than a million people short, compared to Berlin today.
      And Berlin more than doubled in size few years after the introduction of the internal combustion engine.

    • @stipsazg
      @stipsazg 2 роки тому +1

      @@basil3663 I think you are absolutely right.
      The critique was on the road network and it's importance for our current way of life because the video implied that too much resources are being spent on them. If you live in the city, even if you somehow never use the roads, you are still benefiting from them, and therefore part of your taxes goes there.

  • @EmperorNefarious1
    @EmperorNefarious1 2 роки тому +4

    Since I knew of the insane cost of depreciation, I bought an old car. I can do a lot of my own maintanance as well.
    Too bad there is no usable transit of bike lanes in my area. 15 minute drive to work is 1 hour walking plus an hour and a half by bus. Or just an hour and a half of walking on several less suicidal roads. US sucks sometimes.

  • @R1998U
    @R1998U 2 роки тому

    Many people don’t understand how much owning a car throws you back financially. The younger you are, the greater the impact.
    And if you want a car, just because you want it, buy an old car known for it’s reliability, fuel economy, and low insurance costs and taxes.
    Wisely invest the left over money in stocks or whatever is your thing.

  • @sampsalol
    @sampsalol 2 роки тому +12

    Oh yes I live in Finland and I dream of not having to own a car to travel to work and elsewhere. But you need a car for many things like carrying items, skis, bikes, friends, family to places. Until the never happening good public transit system I'm gonna continue owning my car and getting tax breaks for owning and driving it.

    • @dannydaw59
      @dannydaw59 2 роки тому

      What kind of tax breaks do you get there in Finland for cars?

    • @sampsalol
      @sampsalol 2 роки тому

      @@dannydaw59 You get to deduct a certain sum per kilometer from your income tax for commutes to work. It is currently 0.3 euros per kilometre. It's meant to pay for gas and a bit of depreciation. I commute 100 kilometers 5 days a week so my tax break is about 8000 euros a year for driving my car to work. You only get this tax break if its not deemed possible by the tax agency for you to commute with public transport.

    • @johanmetreus1268
      @johanmetreus1268 2 роки тому

      @@sampsalol Is it not that the commuting expense (business cost essentially) gets deducted from the taxable income, meaning at 25% tax rate (unrealistically low, but easy to count with) your annual tax will be €2000 lower after the car deductions?

    • @sampsalol
      @sampsalol 2 роки тому

      @@johanmetreus1268 Spot on. I just didn't find words as good as yours to explain it as well.

    • @jgdooley2003
      @jgdooley2003 2 роки тому

      @@sampsalol Wage earners in one place, not required to travel to a remote site for field work as part of their job, do not get any tax breaks in Ireland. In fact car ownership is heavily taxed and running a car is very expensive but for those who have a car it is essential for most jobs.
      Free lance workers like me who attend work in many remote locations are allowed to deduct travel expenses incurred by their work. Similar to the one already mentioned in the previous post.
      It is why I would never take up a waged job for one employer. Also I would have to work twice as long hours to get the same money so why bother??

  • @querube78
    @querube78 2 роки тому +1

    **Laughs in bikes and electric scoot**

  • @-svet-ka-
    @-svet-ka- 2 роки тому +10

    Chicken and egg problem: people will always favour the cheaper, in terms of money and effort, solution to their problem. If the public transport is comfortable enough and affordable, then people will use it. So, instead of trying to convince people you need to convince the city council. And if there is a working scheme people are happy with in one place and it is a success economically, then soon it will spread to other places. The problem is that there isn't one yet, no matter how passionate you feel about city environment and public transport.
    In English village where I live buses come infrequently, it takes 3 hours to get from one city to the nearby city while the same car trip only lasts 30-40 minutes (because bus routes go through every village on their way making 2-3 stops in each), and the bus ticket is 3 times more expensive than the fuel I would burn using my car. My car is a hybrid, so I don't spend much on taxes and fuel. So, where is the benefit of using public transport for me? I cannot say how I would feel about this issue if I lived in a city because my life habits would be completely different. But without making the transport cheap, frequent and easy to get to you cannot count on people using it, no matter what their habits, beliefs and estimates are.

    • @timiwer
      @timiwer 2 роки тому +5

      Yes, but in a Democracy convincing people means convincing the government. So if everybody wants public transit, it will be built. That is why those videos are so important. To make people realize how we can make our surroundings more pleasing to live in. Of course we have to make it a political issue aswell, but we still need to convince people.

    • @KyrieFortune
      @KyrieFortune 2 роки тому +4

      the point is, once you actually run the numbers public transport is ALWAYS cheaper than the car. Of course you think "why should I spend for tickets when i can spend less for gas", but not only the gas is actually more expensive than it sounds like, even when it's cheap, cars also have a bunch of hidden costs for maintenance people don't think about. I mean, I have seen for myself my parents are spending 60 euros a month for gas just to go to the beach and run a few errands, refusing to buy monthly bus passes which for the four of the family would be 90 euros, then they needed to change wheels, and soon they will need to run a complete check... suddenly, those 30 euros are more than gone. And they are actually surprised doing so little with the car would cost 60 euros.

  • @akbartoryalae279
    @akbartoryalae279 2 роки тому +32

    Great overall video. However I do have to say you've made one presumption which is mostly untrue, you've taken sums as cars bought new, however most people buy cars second hand when depreciation has already largely taken place. E.g Golf 2020 new would have depreciated 15k in 2 years, but people buying second hand, buy it for 15k instead of 30 and depreciation is much slower after the 2 year period. In my opinion unless you're filthy rich you should never buy a car new. Im certain most buy second hand cars. Great overall video though!

    • @andresaliba
      @andresaliba 2 роки тому +4

      If the person bought it used, someone bought it new before them. The costs are still there, just divided by 2 different people.

    • @akbartoryalae279
      @akbartoryalae279 2 роки тому +9

      @@andresaliba No because you're assuming cars and people are 1:1. There are cars being manufactured every single year, the cars that are used don't go anywhere unless they're scrapped. Just more new are generated. Ask yourself how many relatives bought a car new vs old. I'm sure many many more buy used.

    • @andresaliba
      @andresaliba 2 роки тому +5

      @@akbartoryalae279 I think you're not seeing your fallacy here. A car can't be manufactured used, so by definition, someone has to buy it NEW before another person buys it used. It doesn't matter how many more people buy used vs new, the sum of costs are all still there, divided among all of the car buyers. Money doesn't disappear.

    • @akbartoryalae279
      @akbartoryalae279 2 роки тому +9

      @@andresaliba I understand what you're saying, but the video claims that the the cost of ownership per vehicle is X amount. This X amount is only for those who buy cars new.
      That X amount is in itself correct to those who buys cars new, yes I understand that cars being manufactured are new and people buy them. But a city with 5 million working population only a very small X amount by new. Other amount buy used or don't buy at all. The number that buy used every year is much higher than the X amount.
      Also the X amount people spend maintaining a car isn't averaged out so its per new vehicle. Not average including used vehicles.

    • @andresaliba
      @andresaliba 2 роки тому +2

      @@akbartoryalae279 I still don't see the point you're trying to make here. Do you agree with me that it doesn't matter about the numbers for each person, but rather how much total money was spent by individuals for that one object? Regardless if it had 1 or 10 owners, the costs are all still there as a burden to society.
      In his example, he obviously exaggerated both for the car numbers and for the public transit numbers, it's much easier to calculate. If he starts taking into account used car numbers, than all kinds of variables start to appear, which ultimately are all useless, as the costs for the vehicle are all the same, regardless of how many people bought it.