Abstract
The automotive industry is at a crossroad. Electric Vehicles (EV) now pose an existential threat to the Internal Combustion Engine (ICE). In some Northern European nations over 50% of new cars sold are EVs, owing in large part to substantial financial incentives to buy and own an EV, such as tax discounts when purchasing an EV, fuel savings, and preferential use of transportation infrastructure. These countries have pledged to cease all imports of non-EVs by 2035. On the other end of the spectrum are Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries, where EVs account for less than 1 percent of vehicles on the road, due in large part to financial and non-financial impediments to buying and owning an EV. In addition, the price per kilometer driven in the GCC is considerably lower with gasoline than with electricity, which contradicts the European experience where cost savings from electricity versus gasoline can be around 8 to 1. Furthermore, as there is an absence of purchase and ownership/utilization taxation of vehicles in the GCC, no tax discount can be levied, in contrast to the EV tax incentives common in Europe. This paper explores which qualities of driving and owning an EV in the GCC are necessary to persuade certain kinds of new automobile consumers to pay a higher purchasing price for owning an EV as opposed to an ICE, in spite of higher costs for electricity compared to gasoline per kilometer driven. This pilot study attempts to provide an insight to new car purchasing behavior among consumers in Kuwait via a qualitative innovative approach known as ‘Q Methodology’. Interestingly, the factors that emerged from the research represent three subjective perspectives of new car purchase in Kuwait which were labeled as Factor 1, ‘Value Seeker’; Factor 2, ‘Safety Seeker’; and Factor 3, ‘Performance Seeker’. The study concludes that given financial constraints, the ‘Value Seeker’ group is not likely to become an early adopter of EVs in the GCC region. Conversely, the ‘Performance Seeker’, which includes mainly younger men who are more likely to view the fast acceleration of EVs as a deciding factor, and the ‘Safety Seekers’, who are mainly younger women who would value the environmental aspects of EVs as well as the quiet driving experience and low maintenance requirements are determining factors for EV adoption in the GCC region in the future. Â
Highlights
The world is seeing the fastest changing trends in purchasing behavior of new automobiles in decades which might be something that can only be described as ‘paradigm-shifting’
This paper explores which qualities of driving and owning an Electric Vehicles (EV) in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) are necessary to persuade certain kinds of new automobile consumers to pay a higher purchasing price for owning an EV as opposed to an Internal Combustion Engine (ICE), in spite of higher costs for electricity compared to gasoline per kilometer driven
The factors that emerged from the research represent three subjective perspectives of new car purchase in Kuwait which were labeled as Factor 1, ‘Value Seeker’; Factor 2, ‘Safety Seeker’; and Factor 3, ‘Performance Seeker’
Summary
The world is seeing the fastest changing trends in purchasing behavior of new automobiles in decades which might be something that can only be described as ‘paradigm-shifting’. Future price hikes due to the introduction of VAT taxation, the lowering of subsidies on gasoline, and freezing salaries in the public sector where 75% of Kuwaiti citizens work will undoubtedly change automobile buying behavior in the near future, maybe in favor of EVs. The introduction of a VAT levy on automobile sales will give the government an opportunity to offer tax exemptions on EVs, which might stimulate demand like it has in many European countries (Ottesen, A. and Banna, S., 2018). The vision stresses the need for much less reliance on gasoline as a transportation fuel Reflecting this vision, no less than 14 governmental agencies are presently involved in researching and promoting the transition from ICE vehicles to EVs in Kuwait (with a particular emphasis on the infrastructural and technical aspects of this transition)
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