Core Points - General Motors has canceled an emergency plan aimed at extending electric vehicle leasing tax credits, which was intended to alleviate sales pressure on dealers after the tax credit policy expired on September 30 [1] - The plan involved acquiring dealer inventory electric vehicles through its financial division to claim a $7,500 tax credit per vehicle and convert the benefit into leasing subsidies by the end of the year, affecting approximately 20,000 electric vehicles [1] - Following concerns raised by a Republican senator from Ohio, General Motors has committed to self-fund leasing incentives by the end of October [1] - Ford has not clarified its stance on a similar plan launched concurrently, and the industry anticipates that the termination of tax incentives will lead to a significant decline in electric vehicle sales [1]
通用汽车取消电车税收抵免过渡计划