The account will be held by Upromise, Inc., until it is transferred to a college savings fund, known as a 'Section 529' account. Upromise is owned by SLM Corp., which also owns Sallie Mae Bank, so this is no fly-by-night operation. Already Volkswagen claims 6,000 people have taken advantage of the offer, reports The Wall Street Journal, proving that it works to some degree.
Whether it will see the sort of tepid longer-term response that the fuel-incentive offers of the past few months have received will be a test of time. The new Routan minivan, based on the Chrysler Town & Country platform - which also hosts the Dodge Caravan - will be built by Chrysler for the German carmaker at the company's Windsor, Ontario plant. The production outsourcing is designed to help cut costs.
Chrysler itself has been one of the leading proponents of fuel incentives for its vehicles, with its 'Let's Refuel America' campaign. That effort has been a flop, for the most part, with only about 5-10% of customers taking the fuel offer over the more conventional cash incentives or low-interest financing.



Reader Comments
Tue Aug 26 2008 6:55 PM
HECTOR says
I rather my kids work at a car wash when they grow up than buy this horrible looking and probably unreliable crapmobile.
Tue Aug 26 2008 7:11 PM
NoNameDenton says
Yeah Hector, everyone has dreams of their kids working for minimum wage the rest of their lives.
Wed Aug 27 2008 7:51 AM
craigs says
This discussion is interesting!! :-)
Wed Aug 27 2008 2:02 PM
Paul says
It's just an incentive. Not a way of life. I'm sure almost everyone who takes advantage already wanted the VW. There just trying to get people to feel good about their purchase.
"Just sign right here and will bring it around for you....."
Hey is VW still doing the carbon offset program? At least this one gives u something tangible.
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