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Ron 10
QuoteNot true.
You are missing where he said it was "being unfair to the poor".
If I had a clunker I could use the program since I have the cash to buy a new car.... If you are poor, you don't have that cash and would trade in your old (most likely paid off) car and trade it in for a new car that comes with new car payments.
So, the people that can afford the new car... Most likely already have it. The people that can't afford a new car are not likely to get rid of one they have so they can now have a car payment. And those that are poor would be ill advised to go deeper in debt....Even if they can get a loan right now.
"No free man shall ever be debarred the use of arms." -- Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Jefferson Papers, 334
Mass defaults resulted when home buyers were steered into property they couldn't afford and accelerated when times got tight.
The government is encouraging people who probably can't afford new cars and probably don't have car payments to buy property they can't afford with more debt. Anecdotally, people who are in a financial position to buy new cars which are averaging close to $30,000 and would run $500+ a month already have a trade-in worth more than the credit.
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