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Chairman of Ford Motor Company on why he wants to sell fewer cars

Kai Ryssdal May 1, 2013
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Chairman of Ford Motor Company on why he wants to sell fewer cars

Kai Ryssdal May 1, 2013
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An auto company that thinks we should drive less? That could be the future strategy for Ford Motor Company, according to Bill Ford, executive chairman of the company.

“The car for most of its history has helped people live better lives,” he says. “As the world has gotten more affluent, the infrastructure, particularly in urban areas hasn’t developed to a point where this great new volume of new vehicles will fit comfortably into those cities.”

“I could not reconcile the traffic jams that I was seeing [in global cities] with the fantastic projections that some in our industry were putting out there for future sales in some of these markets.” Ford says an emphasis on public transportation is still in keeping with the greater goals of the Ford Motor Company. “What I’m talking about is providing mobility to the people who live in those mega cities in a way that might be slightly different than the way we have today.”

He hopes shareholders will bet on his long term vision for the company. “The world changes whether you change or not. So we are entering into an era where if we are open enough to embrace new business models and new technologies, then this actually will enhance the core business of the Ford Motor Company.”

Ford says, “technology is what’s going to ultimately set us free.” And in some ways, it’s here now — in the guise of self-driving cars. Vehicle-to-vehicle communication (cars that talk to each other) and vehicle to infrastructure communication (cars that pull data from their environment) are all bringing us closer to Ford’s vision.

But the future isn’t here yet and there are some roadblocks. “I’ve often advocated a gas tax,” says Ford, “but there really is no political will for that.” He says the U.S. needs a consistent energy policy. “Until our country really decides which fuel it wants to get behind and then builds out the infrastructure behind it, we are not going to have quick enough adoption to really help solve the issue.”

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