American Auto Dealers
Using Gas To Entice Buyers
With gasoline prices in the United States
surging ahead at a breakneck pace, buyers who once embraced
big oversized trucks and sport utility vehicles (SUVs) are
turning away from gas-guzzlers, a move that’s putting the
squeeze on both automakers and auto
dealers.
None have been hit harder than
Chrysler, which relies on trucks and SUV’s for 70 percent of
its sales. They reported that sales were down by as much as
23 percent during the first four months of 2008. That may be
why Chrysler was the first major automaker to offer what is
clearly becoming the most popular incentive of the
season—gasoline.
After that dismal 4-month
downturn, the maker of Chrysler, Jeep and Dodge vehicles
announced it would guarantee that their new customers would
never pay more than $2.99 per gallon for gas for the next
three years—no matter how high gas prices rise at the
pumps.
In a creative marketing move, Chrysler has
arranged for its customers to get a special credit card to
be used for gas purchases. Customers using the card will
be billed $2.99 per gallon to their charge account and
Chrysler will pay the rest.
The guarantee, which is offered
on 32 models, covers up to 12,000 miles annually for three
years, and allows customers to buy gas anywhere they choose.
The incentive also follows the vehicle if it is sold,
allowing anyone that owns the car during the three-year
period to take advantage of the gas incentive.
Suzuki, whose new car sales have
been less affected, quickly followed suit by offering free
gasoline to US buyers, but only for the summer of 2008.
Industry observers have stated
they do not expect free or discount gasoline to take the
place of the once most-favored incentive for new car
buyers—cash rebates. As critics of the industry are quick to
point out, gas giveaways do nothing to address the
underlying problem. Gas prices will undoubtedly continue to
rise and gas supplies will continue dwindle.
The only real, long-term
solution to easing pain at the gas pump, most will agree,
lies in developing vehicles that are more fuel-efficient as
well as vehicles that use alternative fuel sources. In the
words of one industry observer, “The days of driving on
cheap fossil fuels are as dead as the dinosaur.”
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