This is one of the biggest scandals of recent years and here's why
1. Most manufacturers raised the price of the new cars before the deal started anyway oddly enough meaning poeple were scrapping their perfectly good cars and for it still paid market price!
2. Perfectly good second hand cars scrapped
3. Second hand car prices saw massive rises meaning young kids wanting to get on the road (making getting a job easier) were out of the market
4. Second hand car dealers lost a ton of business
5. YOU paid for this!
So all we got was a bunch of car makers enjoy a nice little boom for their cars no one really wanted or needed. Made fantastic headlines tho "new car sales boom". Unfortunately the bias media we have in this country FAILED to report the ACTUAL story!
yeah the scrappage scheme was a scandal but i mean that is a huge backlog. would be easier for the country to auction all those off im sure there is many familys who would love a cheap auctioned car
its in bedford next to bedford autodrome. im up for a ride maybe stop over and then take the expensive cars home. look at it on google maps
found 2 more pics
The problem is if they auction them the point of the scrappage scheme is 'un-done'. Labour wanted good headline
"New car sales up"
unfortunately for us that meant costing us a shit load of money and opportunity. Thankfully for Labour the public is pretty gullible, and with the BBC so slanted left there was no chance this would be covered in a fair and unbiased manner.
Any, the reason they won't be auctioned is because a flood of decent second hand cars onto the market would see new car sales drop which creates bad headlines. I don't see how a company that is failing to provide the market with a product it wants is somehow 'bad' but that's what people fall for nowadays!
Well you then cause the second hand car market to crash because you flood the market with free cars. It also raises some serious questions about market interference and social engineering.
The problem is the cars should never have been taken off the market in the first place. The cars were there keeping prices quite low for the new buyer and families, and now the prices have gone up because of this. I can't believe how many idiots there are that are nopw in a ton of debt because they fell for this scheme. Getting rid of their perfectly good car to get a new one which isn't any better, and a whole lot more expensive.
Absolute scandal in so many ways - one of the objectives was to clear the backlog of cars clogging up ports and storage depots, and all we have now is another huge backlog of cars.
Replacing perfectly roadworthy cars with other perfectly roadworthy cars, sure, that makes a huge amount of sense! And it did nothing to reduce emissions, all the cars taken off the road would produce less than the amount taken to manufacture and run all these new 'cleaner' cars.
Scrappage was not for the environment - it was for the economy. Not a great idea, but it did help the sales of new cars.
And I have doubts that most of those cars still had fuel in tbh
And yes, while there are "nice" cars parked their, most of them are probably sheds otherwise the owner would of got much much more on a private sale.
For those outside of the UK - For a time the UK government ran a scheme where if you bought a new car, and traded in a 10 year old or more car, you got £2k off the new car. The car you traded in would then be destroyed.
I'm finding it very hard to find out what actually happened to the cars (as afaik they can still be broken for parts...) but I remember their being a lot of controversy over whether or not the cars at Bedford where actually for it.
EDIT - The reason why i'm skeptical is that fuel isn't cheap - if there were a bunch of unguarded cars with fuel and keys then gangs would be stealing parts / petrol to order by now.