2?
11/11/2008 11:04:02 PM
adding:http://business2press.com/2008/11/11/gm-is-a-mess-but-we-still-need-to-bail-gm-out-now/
11/12/2008 10:17:03 AM
^Yeah, your viewpoint is a bit dated. Sure, they were making a lot of boring, unreliable cars throughout the 90's, and a lot of those cars are still on the road. Most people judge GM by the memory of older cars from the last 20 years or so, which are kinda crappy. However, the culture at GM changed quite a bit when Bob Lutz came on board, and you can see the results of forward thinking and R&D spending in a lot of the newer designs. The newest Vettes, Malibu and CTS are all rated near the top of their class for both quality and value, and as stated GM is doing pretty well overseas with Opel, Holden, Vauxhall and high sales in China.They are running uphill and against the wind, however, due to the poor reputation they built over the last few decades and the huge pension system they agreed upon with UAW back in the 80's.
11/12/2008 10:43:37 AM
^agreed. The cars they build now are much better and interesting and desirable than in decades past. The resurgence of Cadillac has been a huge success. Cadillac and Lincoln both sucked balls back in the mid-90s. Lincoln is still there if you care to notice, but Cadillacs are desirable, fashionable, and in some cases performance minded.If anyone's interested I'm working on drafting a letter to the government (house, senate, etc) urging them NOT to give the automakers bail out money. If anyone would like to help edit the letter I'm all for it. It will be general enough that whoever wants it can copy it and send it.
11/12/2008 11:55:37 AM
this is anecdotal, but people overseas love American cars. the units sold there are obviously built for the European & Asian market -- usually small & energy efficient
11/12/2008 12:15:49 PM
11/12/2008 12:33:40 PM
^ Easy, don't give them any money and they won't piss it away. There is no good reason why tax payers should pay to keep GM out of bankruptcy. If you have flown on an airline recently then most likely you know that bankruptcy is a long way from shutting down. GM workers will most likely not even miss a single day of work. All it will cost is GM stock owners the last $3 of their stock (they've already lost $80+) and GM employees their scandalous contracts. I think even if GM was not on the verge of bankruptcy that the union should be busted, but as Noen has pointed out, bankruptcy is the quickest and easiest way to obtain a just outcome.
11/12/2008 12:50:47 PM
http://blog.tomevslin.com/2008/11/saving-us-auto.html
11/12/2008 3:37:35 PM
^if the unions are still involved it still won't solve the problem. That being said, thats a much better idea than just giving them the money (helps with energy use as well).
11/12/2008 4:47:54 PM
no doubt burdensome unions are a problem, but this doesn't help any:
11/12/2008 5:14:33 PM
Let's borrow more money to pay off this huge debt. Surely that won't affect our credit, right?http://www.cnbc.com//id/27641538
11/12/2008 5:18:32 PM
11/12/2008 5:25:02 PM
GM has historically been a terribly inefficient, wasteful company. i dont know if theyve gotten better recently or not.Ford has done a good job following Toyota's lead in leaning out their manufacturing processes
11/12/2008 5:50:11 PM
Firstly, I'd like to say how refreshing it is to see everyone (just about) agreeing on something in here.I think the government bailing any company is a bad idea, especially a company in the retail industry. I also feel like the unions are a big part of these car companies' problems, as well as corporate mismanagement. How can you expect a company to survive when they are paying an average of ~$70/hr for work that other auto makers can pay ~$40's/hr for? Do away with the current union contracts, bring the pay grades back to normal, and that will help greatly with the "big 3" staying afloat i think. I heard on boortz this morning that GM purchased (through healthcare of course) around $17 million worth of Viagra last year. Tell me, is this really necessary to have the company pay for, especially on the brink of bankruptcy? I think not.On a side note as well, I got into a bailout discussion with my roomate last night (a "southern democrat" as he claims), and he called my way of thinking "elitist" because I didn't support the uaw. He claims that fixing the tax policy behind the "free" trade of the auto industry will fix most of the current problem, and that it is in no way a fault of the unions....
11/13/2008 1:32:28 AM
wait, what?GM may have faults, but you can't SERIOUSLY be griefing a company for providing healthcare to their employees?employers can't arbitrarily decide what medication to cover and what not to. most healthcare will cover viagra as prescribed by a doc.sorry you don't approve of it, but that's the way healthcare works, son.
11/13/2008 3:57:35 AM
^because the uaw have fucking retarded coverage policies. They have zero incentive to seek the best care, or to same money. Instead they just bleed the employer dry.
11/13/2008 5:22:45 AM
It doesn't matter what we think, the government will do what ever the hell they want and unfortunately bail them out anyway.Bailing people out doesn't teach anyone a lesson and just prolongs the inevitable.
11/13/2008 6:45:15 AM
11/13/2008 9:08:46 AM
And after the company fails and none of them have health care at all, we'll look back and still be proud that we did it the right way - providing union sanctioned health care to the employees. And the details of the policies, that's the way the system works. We should certainly continue exactly the way we do things now.Bankrupting the country with health care costs is certainly preferable than any of the alternatives that encourage people to live healthy and not get pills they don't need.
11/13/2008 12:01:21 PM
^^ if you ever lose the ability to get it up, i bet your opinion changes.
11/13/2008 12:12:53 PM
it was viagra. viagra is why gm is going down.
11/13/2008 12:25:03 PM
^^ it doesn't matter what my opinion is in that case. The point is, is that a man's ability to get it up is not a life threatening situation, whereas medicine's that lower cholesterol or treat illnesses are.And nowhere in anything I said did I state that viagra is sinking gm. I merely pointed out a flaw in the uaw/gm contract. $17 million wont save them from bankruptcy, but things like that that can be cut back could certainly help out a great bit.
11/13/2008 1:46:59 PM
11/13/2008 2:07:01 PM
The oppressive union contracts are about more than just a flat wage increase. Retirement and medical packages are way overboard too. Frankly, I'm all for workers negotiating whatever they can get. They need to be prepared for the fact that they may have priced themselves out of a job, though.
11/13/2008 2:26:24 PM
11/13/2008 3:23:23 PM
The ironic thing is how much GM was probably spending on their designs, marketing forecasts, and improving production processes.In other words, I'm sure this problem can be solved with more money. Therefore we should use our government to throw money at it.
11/13/2008 4:26:33 PM
minor point: they were spending money on it, but not to improve it. they were just feeding the beast.for people who are interested in how Toyota has dominated the auto industry, how Ford has finally started to catch up, and how GM has failed miserably to recognize the paradigm shift:http://www.amazon.com/Machine-That-Changed-World-Production/dp/0060974176
11/13/2008 4:30:22 PM
And you all hear about this, right?Detroit City Council wants $10 billion bailout for cityhttp://www.detnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20081112/METRO/811120455/1361Among others:L.A. among big cities asking for a piece of Wall Street bailout pie
11/13/2008 4:49:16 PM
11/13/2008 5:44:31 PM
haha, detriot. A glimpse of dem policies gone wild.
11/13/2008 5:53:03 PM
Here's a question I have...If low taxes are suppose to lead to low unemployment, how is it that under the current record low taxes from Bush's policy, we're having the highest unemployment since 9/11 (or longer, by other accounts)?Is high unemployment and low consumer spending a glimpse of republican policies?
11/13/2008 5:59:54 PM
11/13/2008 6:02:16 PM
11/13/2008 6:11:38 PM
I'm gonna go out on a limb and guess that rich pensions and health care coverage for retirees, many of whom retired early, are a substantial cost to the American automakers that foreign car companies don't have to pay.http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A64599-2005Apr18.html
11/13/2008 6:30:26 PM
That isn't rolled into the hourly rate figure?
11/13/2008 6:34:56 PM
I don't believe so.
11/13/2008 6:51:26 PM
11/13/2008 8:19:09 PM
11/13/2008 8:39:13 PM
perhaps it is, but it was not clearly stated. And I find it very arrogant of the "insider" to make assumptions about people not knowing who makes the interior materials or how many companies there are.
11/13/2008 11:37:53 PM
yep, only thing worse than paying $73 per hour is... not paying it all.And having to pay half of it later. When you're about bankrupt.
11/14/2008 11:12:53 AM
The soon-to-be-in-complete control left is not interested in bailing out GM, they want to protect the UAW's contracts. This is simply payback for the unions support.Capitalism requires bankruptcy in certain situations. It is how companies are streamlined or replaced with more efficient ones. The best thing for GM is to go chapter 11, get shed of those union contracts, and become smaller and more efficient.
11/14/2008 12:16:38 PM
if i was the gubment, i'd propose this:- if bankruptcy is the only way the big 3 can break the union's grip on the business, have the them declare it. the renegotiation of the unions' contracts becomes a state of Michigan and/or US government problem - at which stage more reasonable terms should be mandated.- the bailout then kicks in with the taxpayers getting the following: --senior/nonsubordinated debt that is convertible into preferred equity with high dividends or a large number of common equity with voting rights.- board seats with the intention of hiring the right executives and seeing that they are paid for performance. {anyone remember back when some tech CEOs like Jeff Bezos went a year without salary in order to fix their business during the bot com bust? -- that precedent needs to be invoked}- a tax break scheme that highly rewards fuel efficiency - a tax break scheme that helps offset the costs of pensions and other entitlements.i think i bailout can work, and this crisis can be used as an opportunity to make the US auto industry competitive again. as idealogically sound as the anti-bailout argument seems, it makes no sense where the AIGs of the world get $100 billion plus so that they can continue to make paper, while there's nothing but cake to eat for an industry that makes real stuff and employs a lot of people through the whole supply chain (i.e. Borg Warner, Calahan Brake Pads, etc.).Chrysler was bailed out in the 70s through a one time event, and it turned that into a 40 year lifeline and continued to provide jobs. Maybe this time around GM and Ford get one time events, and you let Chrysler get acquired/merged into the other big 2.Further more, this opportunity can be used to transform how the US consumer uses energy. Changing the manner in which auto engines consume energy can be one of the few silver bullets to the long term energy dilema.next up - Airlines - but that's a thread for later.
11/14/2008 12:20:58 PM
Can we get someone in TSB with a basic understanding of the economy please?-First and foremost, US buyers and global buyers are most likely NOT going to buy a $20000 dollar product from a company that filed for bankruptcy. Thats the absolute last option for these guys.-Secondly, if the Auto industry fails, the US economy drops into a deep and prolonged recession. I love the Ayn Rand philosophy flying around this thread and I'm sure to your politically immature world views, the hard line libertarian philosophy sounds good but in practice we all will get affected by such a major industrial failure. There are quite a few side industries associated with the Auto industry and whole economic ecosystem that relies on these three manufacturers. Furthermore, the US manufactures very few major products in this day and age, cars being a large percentage of them. Destruction of that industry will pretty much end American manufacturing in its current form and all associated industries and there would have to be a massive realignment of the US economy to compensate.-Third, this isn't the fault of the UAW, auto workers, or 'lib democrats.' This is the fault of shitty management by GM, Ford and Chrysler running their perspective companies without any vision while agreeing to unbalanced work contracts during boom cycles. When they had money, the signed the dotted line on anything the UAW wanted. They didn't have to, but they did. They also never bothered making compelling products that were attractive on a global scale or investing in a diversified product pipeline.-GM's in trouble because of GMAC. Why does a car company have a major bank which provides loans on everything from cars to real estate?Letting these guys fail or get bought out one at a time is fine, but all at once would produce an economic shock that could have epic fallout.
11/14/2008 12:30:05 PM
11/14/2008 12:41:35 PM
That statement makes a lot of sense to me:
11/14/2008 1:34:52 PM
11/14/2008 3:12:06 PM
Not at all. German unions are quite well compensated too.Don't quite thing Diamler and BMW are teetering on the edge of bankruptcy.Also, lets all make sure we note that Ford is not in as bad shape as the other two with a very successful European presence and successful brands like Volvo and Mazda that it can sell off.In fact, Ford really isn't in danger of bankruptcy at all, but quietly is going along with this for the free money.Chrysler, in my opinion, is as good as dead anyway.The real problem here is GM and that mainly because of GMAC.[Edited on November 14, 2008 at 4:18 PM. Reason : >.<]
11/14/2008 4:17:54 PM
If you want to say that the unions were not to blame because they were acting in their own interests (doing their job), then sure. But honestly, don't the unions have a bit higher moral obligation when they've gotten so big that they can pose and existentialist threat to the company?it's like if a regulatory body destroys a manufacturing sector in the nation. It was never in their mandate to consider the health of the industry while writing regulations. That was supposed to be someone else's responsibility. Well... no one was taking responsibility and you still killed it.
11/14/2008 4:18:13 PM
Read this article:http://www.slate.com/id/2204582/
11/14/2008 4:21:31 PM
^^^The Germans also charge a lot more for their cars. They also live in more socialized countries where healthcare is provided by the government rather than the employer.
11/14/2008 5:30:13 PM