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Fox Business' Dagen McDowell disputes Trump administration claim that lowering fuel economy will make cars more affordable

McDowell: “When you look at the total average purchase price of a car, it is not going to go down”

Special Programs Climate & Energy

Written by Allison Fisher

Published 12/04/25 2:39 PM EST

On December 3, the Trump administration announced plans to roll back fuel economy standards established under the Biden administration, claiming the move will “save Americans $109 billion over five years and shave $1,000 off the average cost of a new car.”

On Fox Business’ The Bottom Line, host Dagen McDowell disputed the claim that the change would lower the cost of car purchases, arguing that if you lower fuel economy standards, people will buy “larger vehicles,” which are “by their very nature more expensive vehicles,” and suggested that these vehicles will also cost consumers more at the pump.

E&E News also reported that auto experts say “easing the standards won’t give consumers much price relief because supply chain constraints, tight inventories, the expansion of new technologies like autonomous driving and consumer preference for larger, heavier vehicles are more influential contributors to increasing vehicle costs.”

The price of cars has become the latest consumer item to become an indicator of affordability.

As The Wall Street Journal reported:

Increasingly stretched consumers are starting to draw the line on what they will pay for a new car, according to dealers, analysts and industry data. 

… 

Car prices soared due to short supply post-Covid, and consumers remained willing to pay up even as inventory came back and volumes approached historic norms. Car buyers continued to shrug off higher prices earlier this year even as they pared back shopping for everything from dishwashers to beer. 

But now auto tariffs, persistent inflation and a tighter job market have more Americans rethinking their biggest-ticket purchases.

Video file

Citation

From the December 3, 2025, edition of Fox Business' The Bottom Line

DAGEN MCDOWELL (HOST): I love what the Trump administration is doing, getting rid of tail pipe emissions regulations. The Congress rescinded, essentially, California's ability to drive the regulations for the entire United States through the Congressional Review Act. Their EV mandate just went poof. … But small cars are cheap. The small cars that are the most fuel efficient, with the small tires, are the cheapest cars. So, if you lower the fuel economy standard, people will buy, in essence, larger vehicles. Those are in — by their very nature more expensive vehicles. So, when you look at the total average purchase price of a car, it is not going to go down. 

MARCUS LEMONIS (HOST): You’re going to win because we're out of time, unfortunately. But I don't agree with you.

MCDOWELL: It’s just — and gas, if you use more gas. 

Biden administration officials had estimated that the rule, which required automakers to meet an average fuel efficiency of about 50 mpg for new vehicles by 2031, would “lower fuel costs by $23 billion while preventing more than 710 million metric tons of carbon dioxide from entering the atmosphere by 2050 — the equivalent of taking 165,000 cars off the roads.”

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