The recent surge in fuel prices due to the war in Iran has spurred demand for electric vehicles around the world, and Chinese car makers are making the most of the opportunity.

  • Gonzako@lemmy.world
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    20 hours ago

    Tho, maybe it’s because the Chinese don’t deal with these huge margins they have on cars now. A new car now costs tenfold what a new car would cost a few decades ago

    • SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca
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      17 hours ago

      A new car now costs tenfold what a new car would cost a few decades ago

      Average car price 20 years ago in Canada, $32,700. That $52,000 corrected to inflation.

      Average price of new car in Canada 2026 is $63000, but average is a stupid measure, the median is much lower.

      I can’t find the actual median price but it is estimated by one site at $45K.

      The big difference between today and a few decades ago is people leasing cars they cannot afford, which drives up prices.

    • JordanZ@lemmy.world
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      18 hours ago

      Not entirely disagreeing with you. The way you worded it was always going to be the case if all you do is compare window sticker prices from across the decades though. Inflation cuts your money in half roughly every 20 years. A 20K car in 2006 is a ~40k car today even if everything else stayed equal. The average price for cars after inflation is going up though. The US’s trend towards SUVs and trucks is certainly pulling prices up but other things do as well like the government mandated features(small relatively but not nothing).

      Some examples(these are when they became mandatory, not available)

      • front airbags - 1998
      • tire pressure monitoring (tpms) - 2007
      • ABS - 2011
      • stability control - 2012
      • backup cameras - 2018
      • phx@lemmy.world
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        9 hours ago

        Are you sure on the TPMS date? I’ve got a vehicle that’s much newer than 2007 that doesn’t have it

        • JordanZ@lemmy.world
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          9 hours ago

          For the US it’s September 2007, for the EU it started November 2012 but seems like a phased rollout until 2014. Don’t really follow EU regs.

          • phx@lemmy.world
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            9 hours ago

            Canada, and still not mandatory here apparently. Which is weird because a lot of our automotive requirements do tend to follow the US due to common production lines and other such factors