8.2 C
New York
Thursday, March 28, 2024

Light Vehicle Sales Per Capita: A Better Look at the Long-Term Trend

Courtesy of Doug Short.

Note from dshort: In response to a weekend request, I’ve updated my long-term perspective on vehicle sales to include the BEA’s data for October.


For the past few years I’ve been following a couple of transportation metrics: Vehicle Miles Traveled and Gasoline Volume Sales. For both series I focus on the population adjusted data. Let’s now do something similar with the Light Vehicle Sales report from the Bureau of Economic Analysis. This data series stretches back to January 1976. Since that first data point, the Civilian Noninstitutional Population Age 16 and Over (i.e., driving age not in the military or an inmate) has risen 60.6%.

Here is a chart, courtesy of the FRED repository, of the raw data. This is a quite noisy series, to be sure.

The next chart does a few things to help us understand the long-term trend.

  • I’ve created a per-capita version using the FRED’s CNP16OV series for the adjustment.
  • I’ve added a 12-month moving average to smooth the noise and help visualize the trend.
  • I’ve indexed the numbers so that the first data point, January 1976, equals 100.
  • I’ve overlaid a linear regression (the red line) to further illustrate the long-term trend.

Click to View
Click for a larger image

The moving-average for the per-capita series peaked in February 1979. Thirty-five-plus years later, it is now down 29.8% from that late 1970’s peak month.

The good news is that this adjusted metric has continued to rise from its Great Recession historic low, and it is now back above the linear regression. It will be interesting to see if the post-recession growth continues in the months ahead.

1 COMMENT

Subscribe
Notify of
1 Comment
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Stay Connected

157,453FansLike
396,312FollowersFollow
2,280SubscribersSubscribe

Latest Articles

1
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x