The following Letter to the Editor was published in the April, 26 2026 edition of The New York Times in the Sunday Opinion Section A on page 11. You can read the original version here.
To the Editor:
Re “Where Did All the Affordable Cars Go?,” by Clifford Winston (Opinion guest essay, April 19):
Mr. Winston correctly identifies a pressing affordability issue shaping our economy: the lopsided pricing of cars that suburban and rural residents rely on in their daily lives.
However, he did not address a key factor in these accelerating costs: increasingly complex federal and state government regulations for safety, fuel economy and the like that made production of even base model cars much more expensive.
Paired with outsize consumer expectations for comfort, performance and integrated technology, modern automotive choices are safer, sip less fuel and perform far better than what was produced in the 1970s and ’80s, but all of these advancements have come at a steep cost.
The majority of Americans rely on their cars for their day-to-day needs, but it seems that domestic automakers will likely be introducing relatively affordable models in the coming years as market forces press them to do so.
Richard Murdocco
Commack, N.Y.
The writer is an adjunct professor of urban planning and environmental policy at Stony Brook University.







