Catch: Newt “Inspired” McCain’s Prize Idea

Yesterday, candidate  McCain called for “a $300 million prize to whoever can develop a battery that will leapfrog the abilities of current hybrid and electric cars.”

On page 199 of Real Change, Newt Gingrich says “There ought to be a billion-dollar tax-free prize for the first hydrogen car that can be mass produced for a reasonable price.”

Observations:

If you’re going to jack somebody else’s ideas, give them credit — especially if the ideas are whacky.  This one meets both criteria — jacked & whacky.

At least McCain showed fiscal restraint by making the prize only $300 million — but why $300 million? In marketing jargon, that’s not a “price point” — he could have gone down to $250 million and not lost any impact, or gone up to $500 million and referred to it as “half a billion dollars” — that has some punch.

If Obama also cops the idea, it certainly won’t be tax-free.  In fact, anything over $250,000 would probably get hit with payroll taxes …

The posted reward for capturing Bin Laden is $50 million.  By inference, it must be 6 times as tough to develop a hydrogen car — and will take at least 7 years (and still counting).    

One Response to “Catch: Newt “Inspired” McCain’s Prize Idea”

  1. Brent McGoldrick's avatar Brent McGoldrick Says:

    First, great site, Ken! To your point… as a political professional, I’d argue the “300MM” price point was selected more for its symbolic value. Within a certain range (as you suggest $250-500), the amount itself is not important. My guess is the price point was “populatition-driven” for easy public consumption, i.e., derived via putting a premium on being able to say “300 mil is not that much — it’s $1 for every man, woman, child in the U.S.” Conversely, any amount OTHER than that invites more questions for the 4th Estate: “How did you derive the number $400 million, 500 million, etc.?”

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