If GM does this, I lose all respect for GM....
It has to be done.
They're dead anyway, and this is the only way to save whatever part of it can be saved.
I wish it were different...
But it's not.
The entirety of American Industry hinges on these three Detroit companies now and whatever part of them can be saved...
Steel...
Plastics...
Defense...
Wake up. Smell the coffee. It's not just Detroit. If you're in electronics, you're going to get hurt too. If you're in finance, you're gonna get hurt too. If you're in the medical field, you're gonna get hurt too.
We are collectively going to HAVE TO realize that we have to hang together with our manufacturing companies, or we're going to hang separately.
They're dead anyway, and this is the only way to save whatever part of it can be saved.
I wish it were different...
But it's not.
The entirety of American Industry hinges on these three Detroit companies now and whatever part of them can be saved...
Steel...
Plastics...
Defense...
Wake up. Smell the coffee. It's not just Detroit. If you're in electronics, you're going to get hurt too. If you're in finance, you're gonna get hurt too. If you're in the medical field, you're gonna get hurt too.
We are collectively going to HAVE TO realize that we have to hang together with our manufacturing companies, or we're going to hang separately.


What I do believe is that automakers worldwide should be able to compete equally in the worldwide market. That might be a pipe dream, but that's what I believe. I don't want to live in a place where the government determines what I buy.
I've never looked at a new car at a dealer, but when they have the car show out here in KC, if its a production car, all US/Japan automakers always show what percentage of the parts came from US/Canada. I can't remember if the Europeans do or not.
The American brands NEED to stay American the way I see it. I don't care for a GM Chrysler merger, but IF that has to happen. So be it. It's a shame people buy so many foreign vehicles in this country. We should have a huge tax on import car purchases in this country. Maybe even a tax incentive for buying American!
I have never owned an import, but I can say that I don't buy into protectionist schemes or any policy that keeps imported cars out of the country. I'm old enough to remember the pieces of s*it that US automakers sent out of the factory in the late 70s, 80s, and 90s. As those sales bled away to Honda, Toyota, and once upon a time, Mitsubishi, each manufacturer at their own time and own pace realized that they actually have to put effort into making vehicles oinstead of peddling the pieces of crap that they did.
Ford was one of the 1st to get their act together. In the 80's they adopted a "continuous improvement" philosophy that resulted in some of the industry's best quality cars. My 1981 mustang was a pile, yet my '85 and later Mustangs held up extremely well.
US automakers also simply are not able to sustain good quality vehicles without competition.
No one with 2 syncronized brain cells will call GM's quality in the 80s as industry leading. GM recovered nicely in the early 90s. Then sank again as the economy got better. Playskool interior materials, power window motors that barely could lift the window (I have replaced the motors in all 3 4th gens I've owned, and even the 2002 needed replacemet 3 times on 2 windows). and generally not giving a f*ck about cars sent GM to the bottom again. Ford ranked near the top of quality in the late 80s early 90s, then plunged late in the decade with penny pinching that toasted cooling fans, blew head gaskets, and botched new vehicle introductions. Chrysler, never stellar quality, at least created "WOW" Gotta have it designs.
However, having spent alot of time overseas, I [color=red]DO[color] feel strongly about fair trade. I feel that we should match any barriers other countries have against us and our products.
I know (and this is ironic) that my attitude helped accelerate the Great Depression. The crash was exasperated when Hoover signed a bill that raised tarriffs on imports which prompted other countries to raise tarriffs on us, which sent already tumbling demand for US products here in the US into the dumpster because we lost alot of our ability to at least keep production going with exports.
Lets not loose focus of the fact that the US auto industry ended up in the crapper because they put all their eggs in the Truck & SUV basket when even a D- student of business would recognize as a losing proposition if fuel prices suddenly went up (which has often happened over the years), and their decision (GM most openly) decided that there was no need to continue to heavily invest in cars.... which Toyota, Honda, and Nissan continued to with a vengence.
If someone else from another school wins a race at your school, does it make you a better athlete if you ban him from running at your school, or does it lower your standards against all the other schools.
We aren't going to have the best cars if we don't have imports from other contries to compete against. It's up to our industry to step in, and rise to the challenge.......... or I may start eventially having to by imports.
Yes, we primarily have the Japanese to thank for the vast quality improvement to current domestic vehicles. I agree with everything you say, until we get to the "dumb old Detroit automakers building gas-guzzling SUV" line. They built and sold what people wanted (notice I said wanted, not needed). The Asian automakers continued to focus on car design because that's what their home-markets demanded. When the market changed, they already had home-market designs to shift over to. Everyone screams about how "forward-thinking" and "smart" Toyota is. But who just spent a fortune entering the full-size truck segment in the U.S. right before oil prices skyrocketed?
I agree on leaving Chevy and Caddy and leaning staff like crazy. A regular brand and a luxury brand seems to work for a lot of the competition - and most other cars have a Chevy version as well (or could quite easily). Perhaps leave GMC for commercial sales, but thats still assuming they keep the class 5, 6, and 7 medium duty trucks.
If you kept any brands between Buick, Pontiac, or Saturn - keep Saturn.
Here's an interesting excerpt from today's Automotive News:
"GMAC has cited tough credit markets as a reason for the tighter standards. But many dealers see it as a tactic by Cerberus to exert pressure on GM at the bargaining table."
"GMAC has cited tough credit markets as a reason for the tighter standards. But many dealers see it as a tactic by Cerberus to exert pressure on GM at the bargaining table."
In light of today's news that automaker's finance arms qualify for TARP, does anyone see the merger going through?
http://www.reuters.com/article/bonds...33011720081027
It sounds like GM needs GMAC to qualify, or am I reading this wrong?
http://www.reuters.com/article/bonds...33011720081027
It sounds like GM needs GMAC to qualify, or am I reading this wrong?
Couple of points you missed, Eric.
First, GM won't fire their union. Not by a long shot. Would you fire your doctor that knows your health history and hire someone you don't know off the streets? Same difference. The current workers at GM know their job, and I can tell you from personal experience, training an all new workforce and expecting to maintain hardwon quality improvements don't go hand in hand. It's also very expensive to train people
First, GM won't fire their union. Not by a long shot. Would you fire your doctor that knows your health history and hire someone you don't know off the streets? Same difference. The current workers at GM know their job, and I can tell you from personal experience, training an all new workforce and expecting to maintain hardwon quality improvements don't go hand in hand. It's also very expensive to train people
GM would likely be able to set new work rules and adjust pay somewhat, but everything is done via court. They aren't going to let GM pay WalMart wages to assembly line workers. $12 per hour simply isn't going to happen in a skilled manufacturing workforce unless we're talking about new hires or a plant in a town called Eight-People-live-in-a-wooden-shack, Mississippi.
Nonetheless, whatever the guys at the non-union import plants are making I'd guess that's the max you'd be looking at.
And if GM goes non-UAW, will the import plants have an incentive to keep wages as high?
After seeing what happened to the Buick dealership my dad worked at for over 30 years, I know for a fact that while GM can't just say "you're closed," if they want you closed, they can get you there. You know that. It costs "something" but that something's not always much.
This is a good article and explains a lot.
Here's something interesting: How quickly we forget cheaper gas higher pickup and suv sales/
They link to a Automotive news article, but I don't have a subscription to view it.
Pickup and SUV sales plummeted when gas hit $4 per gallon, and many thought these gas-guzzling segments would never fully recover. That may be true, but for now Americans are once again getting more comfortable with trucks and SUVs. Truck sales fell below 10% of overall vehicle sales back in May and June, but the price of gas falling from an average of $4.11 per gallon to $2.78 has helped the share of trucks rise to 14.1% of the overall market for September. Depending on how buyers react to the financial crisis, October could be even better as gas prices have continued to go down. SUVs have seen a smaller but still significant jump in overall share, going from 1.9% in May to 2.5% in September – a big improvement for a shrinking segment.
At least one expert thinks the merger is the best alternative...
"Grant Thornton Says a GM and Chrysler Transaction is the Best Alternative to Preserve Jobs and Cash"
http://sev.prnewswire.com/banking-fi...0102008-1.html
"Grant Thornton Says a GM and Chrysler Transaction is the Best Alternative to Preserve Jobs and Cash"
http://sev.prnewswire.com/banking-fi...0102008-1.html
"Chrysler as we know it will cease to exist very soon," said Kimberly Rodriguez, principal of Grant Thornton's automotive practice. "At this point, there are very few options available to either company. We believe a transaction between GM and Chrysler is likely because it would be the most expedient way to protect cash and jobs at both companies. If one or the other company were to fail, we would face a much bigger calamity -- the collapse of the North American supply base and the potential endangerment of all three Detroit automakers and businesses that depend on them."


