The Effects of “Buy American”: Electric Vehicles and the Inflation Reduction Act
Working Paper 33032
DOI 10.3386/w33032
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We provide the first ex post microeconomic welfare analysis of the electric vehicle (EV) tax credits in the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA). Relative to pre-IRA policy, the credits generated $1.96 in domestic benefits per dollar of government spending, with taxpayer cost of $36,500 per additional EV. Relative to having no EV credits, they yielded $1.11 in domestic benefits per dollar of government spending. A leasing loophole that sidestepped domestic content rules created negative domestic benefits. A prominent example of green industrial policy, the credits harmed foreign countries by shifting surplus to domestic producers and helped them by decreasing CO₂ emissions.
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Copy CitationHunt Allcott, Reigner Kane, Maximilian S. Maydanchik, Joseph S. Shapiro, and Felix Tintelnot, "The Effects of “Buy American”: Electric Vehicles and the Inflation Reduction Act," NBER Working Paper 33032 (2024), https://doi.org/10.3386/w33032.Download Citation
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Non-Technical Summaries
- The Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) relied heavily on electric vehicle (EV) subsidies to advance its goal of decarbonizing the US...