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Analysts believe that 14 million vehicles is a natural level for annual U.S. sales, based on population, the rate people scrap used cars and other factors. J.D. Power expects sales this year to be around 11.6 million, up from 10.4 million last year. Before the recession and bankruptcies, auto sales hit about 17 million, but that was partly because they were juiced by overproduction and generous incentives. Some analysts think automakers should speed the recovery with an eye-popping
-- but not profit-busting -- deal. Michaeli says the biggest factor holding back sales is consumers' fear of layoffs, so he thinks automakers should offer to buy back cars if people lose their jobs. Hyundai won customers last year by launching a bold program that did just that. The South Korean automaker's market share is up 38 percent since it began "Hyundai Assurance" in January 2009. That's proof such programs can work, Michaeli says. Toprak thinks the government should guarantee car loans, charging buyers a small premium to cover the cost of any defaults. But so far, there's been no discussion of such a plan, or of a repeat of the $2.88 billion Cash for Clunkers program. Under that program, dealers offered customers government-funded rebates of $3,500 to $4,500 to trade in older models for new ones that got better gas mileage. Deals are still out there on some models, and incentive spending for Asian automakers crept up this year after Toyota Motor Corp.'s safety recalls. But generally, automakers are not boosting incentives. In August 2008, GM offered an average of $4,053 per vehicle in incentives; this August, it's expected to spend $300 less than that, according to TrueCar. That leaves many buyers in limbo. Lori Pietryga of Ann Arbor, Mich., has a 2007 Honda CR-V with 10 months left on a four-year lease. She's considering buying a new CR-V, but only if the price is right. Pietryga, 51, a medical equipment saleswoman, pays $450 per month. If she can get a dealer to buy out her lease and give her a CR-V for the same payment or less, she might sign the papers. But with only 40,000 miles on her current CR-V, she's able to wait if the dealers don't cooperate. "If it's not a deal, I don't need to do it," she says. Pietryga plans to play dealers against each other to try to get a better deal. Schuster says eventually cars will wear out and people will have to buy, regardless of the incentives. But in the meantime, he says, "it takes a while to get off the drug."
[Associated
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