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Ownership has peaked but cars keep driving

When Daimler last week issued its second profit warning this year, it was evidence of the cyclical troubles that German carmakers face, beset by the diesel clampdown in their own country and lower sales in China. It was also a sign of a longer-term malaise.

The moment of “peak car” — people switching from driving to travelling by train, bus and bicycle, has occurred in many developed economy cities. The average distance that each person drives per year peaked in the 2000s or earlier in cities including London, Stockholm, and Atlanta. It has even fallen in Beijing, thanks to the clampdown on car ownership.

This happened before the revolution in transport enabled by the smartphone and Uber, which now offers on its app everything from taxis to shared rides and e-bikes in some US cities. Given that two-thirds of the world’s population may live in cities within 20 years, the trend is not the friend of companies reliant on individual sales.

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約翰•加普

約翰·加普(John Gapper)是英國《金融時報》副主編、首席產業評論員。他的專欄每週四會出現在英國《金融時報》的評論版。加普從1987年開始就在英國《金融時報》工作,報導勞資關係、銀行和媒體。他曾經寫過一本書,叫做《閃閃發亮的騙局》(All That Glitters),講的是霸菱銀行1995年倒閉的內幕。

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