Some of us forgot that the most expensive part of an EV vs gasoline argument is that EV battery depreciate over time (more so) and mileage (less so), vs in a gasoline car it is the fuel cost. The energy cost per mile is going to be better in EV because electricity is cheaper to transport from the raw fuel, have a more diverse source (nuclear, hydro, coal, natural gas, wind, etc), and have off peak time vs gasoline (from oil well in selected locations, and not every nation has energy security).
People likely wouldn't replace a cheap EV's worn out battery with new cells, they may just swap a collision salvage battery and move on, till its useful lifespan is over. People therefore may not do as much collision repair as they might be cheaper to find 2 donors and swap them.
Poor people making $18/hr do not buy new car, gasoline or EV. It is obviously not going to work financially. They may, however, buy worn out gasoline cars and pay for regular repairs on the powertrain, or they may buy a worn out EV and fast change half way between commute, and still live far away like low income people typically do (a lot of construction workers I know live in Salinas while working in Santa Clara, 2 hrs each way). They would likely have to fast charge in Gilroy for 20 mins if their range is not enough to go home every day. Why would they do that? I don't know, not today for sure, but that might happen in the future if charging is faster and EV is cheaper as they age by the year, or maybe we will have better batteries in the future that makes swapping every 10 year be cheaper or rebuilding old batteries is a viable solution.