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Consumer Learning and Hybrid Vehicle Adoption

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2010

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John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University
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Heutel, Garth, and Erich Muehlegger. 2010. Consumer Learning and Hybrid Vehicle Adoption. HKS Faculty Research Working Paper Series, RWP10-013, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University.

Abstract

We study the diffusion of hybrid vehicles among consumers. Using data on sales of 11 different models over seven years, we identify the effect of the penetration rate – total cumulative hybrid sales per capita – on new hybrid purchases. The penetration rate significantly affects new purchases, and the effect differs by hybrid model. In particular, we find a positive diffusion effect from the Toyota Prius and a negative diffusion effect from the Honda Insight, with elasticities of 0.23 to 0.85 for the Prius and –0.08 to –0.32 for the Insight. This finding is consistent with our model of model–specific learning along with anecdotal evidence that early Insight models were perceived to be of lower quality than Prius models. Higher Insight penetration rates gave a negative signal about hybrid quality and inhibited rather than promoted hybrid adoption. The findings are relevant for policy designed to promote new technologies.

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MBG - Markets, Business, and Government, MLD - Management, Leadership, and Decision Sciences, Decision Sciences, Decision Making, Individual Decisions

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Consumer Learning and Hybrid Vehicle Adoption… : DASH Story 2013-07-15
I am a transportation ssytems analyst at Argonne National Laboratory researching how government polcies can affect consumer adoption of advanced-technology vehicles, in order to inform the U.S. Deportment of Energy about the potential benefits of vehicle technology research and development under future economic, market and policy conditions. Research done by Harvrd and other institutions is valuable in my owrk.