Author: Dr. Arthur Van Benthem
Partially funded by the Kleinman Center, Dr Arthur van Benthem from Wharton, Dr Sebastien Houde from Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics at the University of Maryland and Dr Kenneth Gillingham will study the economics of Mile per Gallon (MPG) claims. Car manufacturers in the U.S. are required to meet corporate average fuel-economy (CAFE) standards. These standards consist of yearly targets that take the form of sales-weighted fuel-economy averages that must be met for the entire fleet offered by each manufacturer (or by purchasing compliance credits from other manufacturers). While manufacturers and dealers are required to disclose fuel economy information via a mandatory labeling scheme, a primary mechanism for the transmission of information about fuel economy to consumers is through advertising. The project aims to investigate how advertising influences the demand for vehicles of different fuel economies and the overall emissions profile of the car fleet. This finding will shed light on the role of advertising in meeting tightened fuel-economy standards. One compliance channel for manufacturers would be to increase the sales of their models that over-comply with current standards. They can do this by installing fuel-efficient technology, changing suggested retail prices, but also by attempting to raise demand through aggressive advertising. A related question is whether firms advertise more when they are facing a tight and increasing fuel-economy standard. This is particularly relevant with the upcoming considerable tightening of the CAFE standards from 2017-2025.