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Home » Transcript of EV Mandates vs. Freedom with Mark P. Mills

Transcript of EV Mandates vs. Freedom with Mark P. Mills

Read the full transcript of author Mark P. Mills’ lecture titled “The Economics and Future of Electric Vehicles” during a Hillsdale College CCA seminar on “Economic Issues and Controversies” on November 12, 2024. Mark P. Mills is the author of “The Cloud Revolution: How the Convergence of New Technologies Will Unleash the Next Economic Boom and a Roaring 2020s“…

Listen to the audio version here:

Introduction

[MARK P. MILLS:] I thank Hillsdale for inviting me back. I don’t think I offended people sufficiently last time, so I’m back to try again. I feel like I should have had a picture of Peanut behind me after Matt’s invocation. It’s quite amusing. I’m going to talk about electric cars.

And Dominic tells me that his parents are proud owners of a Tesla. So I’m not beating up on Elon Musk or the Teslas, but I’m going to talk about the vision of the all-electric car future that’s not just an idea, but as all of you know, is something that’s being essentially mandated and pushed by our federal government, twelve states, dozens of countries.

In the aftermath of last week, the election generates the normal fallout of really a blizzard of opinions about who won, who lost, who’s going to win, who’s going to lose in the future, what kind of policies are going to change. One of the issues that’s at the center of this sort of blizzard of policy angsting because now we move from politics to policy. This is the cycle, of course, of elections.

At the center of these policy debates in Washington, of course, is the electric vehicle future, the subject of my assignment. And I take assignments seriously. When Hillsdale College assigns me a topic, I deliver on my assignment. Otherwise, I won’t get invited back. And it’s nice to come back here. I like it here.

Two Categories of Energy Policy

When it comes to the province of what government policymakers can do in energy domains, broadly speaking, and in about cars in particular, there are just really two categories to consider in order to attempt to do some useful predicting and forecasting.

The first category is about money in politics by definition. That’s the anchor category. And the second category is about physics and engineering. They relate to each other, but they can often be independent magisteria, as we know. Congress regularly passes laws that violate the laws of physics. They pass laws—I’m a physicist, so I take offense. They pass laws that violate the laws of common sense. But this is a democracy, so we’re allowed to do that.

Usually, eventually, physics wins. Nature wins.

The Money and Politics of EVs

I want to start with the money and the politics, and specifically, the epic and utterly unprecedented quantities of money that are now being deployed or are yet to be deployed to influence energy markets broadly through taxes, grants, subsidies, regulatory mandates.

It’s hard to predict what the incoming administration in the Congress will do to modify or perhaps even repeal some or all of the enormous, complex labyrinth of energy policies that have been put in place in recent years. It’s a very, very deep, wide, and you know the expression, whole of a government effort to bend energy markets towards what policymakers want. But the task is enormous. The political and legislative task to unbend this will not be easy.

The ill-named Inflation Reduction Act, according to its advocates, not according to me, is, and I quote, “the largest climate policy in U.S. History.” That means, by definition, it’s the largest energy policy in U.S. History. Essentially, all the programs in the IRA, all the spending, all the mandates, essentially all of them, are directed at the energy sector.

And by various estimates, not the CBOs, but the estimates once the bill was passed, by various serious estimates from banking firms, including the Congressional Research Service, the IRA will lead to nearly three trillion dollars in direct spending induced into the economy, and an additional three trillion dollars of spending will be required to accommodate the mandates that are extant in the Inflation Reduction Act. And this is a staggering amount of money even by modern Washington standards.

To give you some perspective on that, it is the single biggest piece of legislation ever passed in American history. Context it this way. The United States—so we’re talking three trillion dollars piece of legislation of direct spending and three trillion dollars of induced spending. The United States spent four trillion dollars in inflation-adjusted terms to prosecute World War II. It’s an utterly staggering quantity of money.

EVs are a centerpiece of this monumental energy policy. And it bears noting as maybe a specific example to give you a sense at the personal device level, the National Bureau of Economic Research recently completed an analysis of what the IRA will deploy in terms of subsidies for EVs, electric vehicles. They estimate that the IRA will spend between twenty-three thousand dollars and thirty-two thousand dollars per car, per EV.

This is, it’s fair to say, sort of a China level industrial policy. In fact, you could say, rarely has there ever been an example, such a dramatic example in history, of the execution of the line, and you’ll remember this from President Obama. You know the line. “I’ve got a pen.” President Obama delivered that line ten years ago, and we now understand what it means when you got a pen. I think the jury is out on what President Trump will do now that he has the pen, but I’m not sure what will happen. I have guesses and opinions only.

The Reality-Based Category: Physics and Engineering

So I’m going to restrict my remarks to the second category when it comes to making predictions about the future of electric vehicles. And I want to be specific here. I’m talking about the all-electric vehicle, the so-called battery electric vehicle. It has no engine. It’s not a hybrid. And it’s the vehicle that the government wants us to purchase and only purchase in the coming years.

This sort of worldview that I want to paint for you is I’ll call it the reality-based category, realities that are anchored in the laws of physics, anchored in the principles of engineering and the nature of human behavior, nature of human nature, if you like.

There was a great line from the science fiction novelist, Philip K.