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The Market For Electric Vehicles: Indirect Network Effects And Policy Impacts

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Abstract

Plug-in electric vehicles (EVs) offer great potential in reducing local air pollution and carbon emissions and in alleviating dependency on fossil fuel. However, there are significant barriers to the diffusion process of this new technology. The EV market features indirect network effects (or the chicken-and-egg problem) in that consumers may be reluctant to adopt EVs with the lack of public charging stations while investors are less willing to build charging stations when the installed base of EVs is small. Indirect network effects could amplify shocks whether negative or positive through feedback loops and therefore could slow down or speed up the diffusion process. Using a data set of quarterly EV sales in 353 metro areas from 2011 to 2013, this paper provides the first empirical analysis on the importance of indirect network effects in this market: a 10% increase in the number of charging stations would increase the EV sales by 10.8% while a 10% growth in the EV stock would lead to a 5.8% increase in the number of charging stations. Our simulation results find that the current federal tax credits of up to $7,500 have contributed to 48.5% of the EV sales during 2011-2013, with indirect network effect explaining 42% of that sales increase. The total tax credit of $1.05 billion given out during these three years brought about $0.23 billion in long-term environmental benefits, while a policy of equal-size spending but subsidizing charging station building would be several times more effective.

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2015-05-24

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plug-in electric vehicles; indirect network effects; subsidy

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Agricultural Economics

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M.S., Agricultural Economics

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Master of Science

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Government Document

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dissertation or thesis

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