Last month, I attended the National Bike Summit, a conference hosted by the League of American Bicyclists. I did this because the executive director of the Iowa Bicycle Coalition was presenting the results of the economic impact analysis we had conducted on their behalf the previous year.
At the conference, I heard a range of different presentations. These ranged from a county commissioner from Houston speaking about the growth of bicycle infrastructure in his city to the editor-in-chief of the Cook Political report speaking on the federal prospect to the midterms to cycling economists from the Netherlands running a simulation on cycling reform at the local level.
The final talk of the conference, though, was the most fiery. It was given by the hosts of a popular podcast called The War on Cars that is focused on pushing back against car culture in the United States.
Full disclosure: I am a bit more on the “ditch your car” side of the transportation spectrum myself. I never owned a car in high school or college and managed to live without one until an employer in Omaha required me to buy one as a condition of employment. Once I moved to California, I got rid of my car and was able to live mainly walking, bussing, and biking until my current fiancee moved in with me a couple of years ago. I am now the owner of 0.5 cars.
The message of the “War on Cars” is intentionally provocative. One of the hosts even went as far as to say that no one was going to listen to a podcast called “incremental change for win-win solutions.” But there are reasons to worry about reliance on cars.
In a 2019 policy brief I wrote–one of our first as a firm–I wrote about the opportunity for the automation of cars to open the door to vehicle miles traveled fees. In this brief, I went over the many costs of another car on the road.
One is congestion. While road usage can function like a public good under most circumstances, at the time that people want to use cars the most, space on roads becomes rivalrous and car speed slows. This leads to higher commute and travel times for drivers, which is time people do not get back. Fewer cars on the roads means less congestion, which means more time for people.
A second cost of cars is crashes. Tens of thousands of Americans lose their lives to car crashes every year, and many others lose their cars or sustain injuries due to them. Fewer cars on the roads means lower chances of sustaining injury or risking death due to being in a car.
Cars also emit pollution into the atmosphere. Local emissions like particulate matter and nitrous oxide clog lungs and lead to cardiovascular disease and death. Carbon emissions hasten climate change. The fewer cars are on the road, the fewer emissions are impacting human health and the long-term sustainability of the earth.
A final impact of cars is infrastructure degradation. Every time a car drives on the road, it slowly wears down the road and degrades its quality. More degradation of quality can lead to more dangerous roads which can cause damage to cars or even lead to more crashes. If roads degrade too much, they will become inoperable. More cars on the roads means more spending on maintenance of roads. Fewer cars on the road increase their lifespan.
The socially optimal number of cars on the road is a number determined by the marginal social cost of an extra car on the road equalling the marginal social benefit of an extra car on the road. This could be different in different states since different states have different topography and economies. That being said, understanding how many households do not have cars gives us some idea of how reliant a given state is on cars and how much that state has been able to diversify its transportation system. It also could give a snapshot of deprivation. In many parts of the country, it is difficult to participate in the economy without a car. Seeing what percentage of people do not have cars gives us a view of the percentage of people who are not able to participate in the economy in a certain way.
So here it is. In the table below, you can see what percentage of households do not have a car in each of the 50 states.
From this list, I have noticed a few things.
There is a large concentration of states in the northeast that have high levels of no-car households. Nearly one in three New York households do not have a car, likely due to its inclusion of the largest city in the United States, which has a strong multimodal transportation network. Massachusetts, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Maryland, and Connecticut are all within a state or two of New York and also in the top 10 states for no-car households.
Many states in the Midwest are in the top half of the list of no-car households: Illinois (3), Ohio (12), Minnesota (18), Michigan (19), Missouri (20), North Dakota (21), Wisconsin (22), and Indiana (25). A random Ohio household is less likely to own a car than a random California household.
The states with the highest levels of car ownership are Western states. Idaho, Wyoming, Utah, and Montana are the top 4 states for car ownership, all with over 95% of households owning cars. The only other state to meet that threshold is South Dakota (95.2% car ownership).
There is one strange outlier in this list: Alaska. The state of Alaska has over 9% of households without a car. This could be for a combination of reasons: spread out infrastructure that makes cars less viable as a form of transportation, higher costs of car ownership in Alaska than in the “lower 48,” or high levels of poverty in Anchorage. Whatever reason, Alaska is a strange inclusion in the top 10 least car-dependent states.
Prevalence of no-car households is a little bit of a chicken-and-egg problem. Do these places have fewer cars because there are more alternatives or do more alternatives exist because there are fewer cars? It is likely a combination of the two. The benefit they get, though, is fewer costs associated with having too many cars on the road.
