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Drives: 2000 Camaro SS Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Louisville, Ky.
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Only part of the $50 billion GM received was in the form of a loan and they have paid that portion off. In return for the balance you mention, the government received $2 billion in preferred stock and 61% of the company's privately held common shares (that has since been reduced to something like 35%). The US Treasury (tax payers) is made whole (or as close as they will be) as GM continues to perform well and their position is sold off.
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#44 | |
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I said what I said to see what kind of reaction it would get. I come from a GM family and know damn well how overpaid people have been in the past and present. Its not just pay its health benefits as well, with Americans being so grossly out of shape physically that isn't a winning proposition. Throw on top all the other stuff you just said and its easy to why our white collar jobs are disappearing. We did this to ourselves, we have nobody to blame but ourselves. If we want blue collar jobs to come back a lot of things gotta change starting with all of us.
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#46 | |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Drives: 2005 STi corn fed Join Date: Jul 2008
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Last edited by 8cd03gro; 05-24-2011 at 04:08 PM. |
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#47 | |
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Hail to the King baby!
Drives: '19 XT4 2.0T & '22 VW Atlas 2.0T Join Date: Dec 2008
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And I believe you are now making up another loan to make your case. Everyones problem was GM used the original loan money to pay back the loan. Now you are making up another loan that didn't happen. GM paid back all money that was borrowed. The remainder was traded for stock. It's really pretty simple. What I think you are trying to do is continue to make the stock that the government holds a loan when it isn't. GM took 9 billion, held it and then paid back the loan with it. I've never heard a different complaint until now. So just to be clear, you are saying GM borrowed 9 billion from the government, then borrowed another 9 billion from the government and then paid back the 9 billion to the government? And just to be clear, if you look at GMs balance sheet there is no 9 billion debt to the government. GM carries 5 billion in debt as of the last quarter.
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"Speed, it seems to me, provides the one genuinely modern pleasure." - Aldous Huxley
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Drives: 2000 Camaro SS Join Date: Feb 2010
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#49 | |
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If the government decided today to simply give Exxon hundreds of billions of dollars because it is a big employer by buying some of their stock at $500 a share, everyone would rightfully see it as a handout. Why when it is GM should the same situation be looked at differently?
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2022 1SS 1LE (Arrived 4/29/22)
"The car is the closest thing we will ever create to something that is alive." Last edited by fielderLS3; 05-25-2011 at 06:06 AM. |
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Drives: 2000 Camaro SS Join Date: Feb 2010
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#52 | |
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That said, there are plenty of other ways to protect a market, import taxes/tariffs, tax breaks for domestics, quotas, subsidies. And its absurd to argue that when a nation like South Korea or Japan has millions of guaranteed domestic auto sales it doesn't provide a competitive advantage in the global market place. Toyota, Honda, Nissan, and Hyundai/Kiacars are all clearly up to the standard of what buyers in the US and around the world want, so for them its not a case of propping up failures. I can almost support protectionism when a nation is trying to establish its own industries and their own fledgling attempts to stand on their own without getting swamped by big international competitors. But that hasn't been the case in Korea for years, or Japan for decades. Instead, you have Toyota selling more cars worldwide than anybody else, when there is only a single major market where they sell more than GM: Japan. Meanwhile, the JDM also allows smaller manufacturers like Suzuki and Mitsubishi to keep building cars. Also, with my equal trade idea it would usually be in the other nations best interest to simply remove their own trade barriers. Afterall, the Korean auto industry would take a severe hit if they lost ~400,000 units of export to the United States, far bigger than what they would take by allowing the unimpeded import of US automobiles. Afterall, their market is at best 1/6 the size of the US market. Assuming that the combined US automakers would have a comparable market share in South Korea as Hyundai/Kia have over here the 'trade rate' on cars would be somewhere around 6:1 (currently its something like 66:1). So Korea would stand to lose either 65,000 sales by allowing US automakers in or lose 400,000 by being shut out of the US. I would rather Korea open up, but I wouldn't be terribly saddened if they got shut out either. Same with China, Japan, or an number of other countries.
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Note, if I've gotten any facts wrong in the above, just ignore any points I made with them
__________________ Originally Posted by FbodFather My sister's dentist's brother's cousin's housekeeper's dog-breeder's nephew sells coffee filters to the company that provides coffee to General Motors...... ........and HE WOULD KNOW!!!!__________________ Camaro Fest sub-forum |
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#53 | |
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I want GM to be a raging success because its cars are the best. When its cars are the best and it is still not a success, that says something is wrong to me.
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RDP Motorsport//GEN5DIY//Cultrag Performance//JPSS//Rodgets Chevrolet//
Operation Demon//Buy at Invoice//RACECARWEAR RESPECT ALL CARS. LOVE YOUR OWN. warn 145:159 ban |
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- Tariffs/Quotas I have already been over. - Tax breaks are yet another example of special privilege. Why is it that GM deserves a tax break and your small restaurant owner in Louisiana does not?Not only does this violate equality before the law, but it (coercively) redistributes wealth to GM. Quote:
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Another thing to take into consideration is GDP per capita. GDP by itself isn't really useful but combined with a "per head" count, then it's usually a good indicator of economic performance. So, what you will see the United States always in (at least) the top 10, while South Korea and Japan do its best to crack top 25. China? Usually in the 90s. |
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#55 |
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Two Miles An Hour
Drives: SIM 2LT RS Join Date: May 2010
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Money
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expect nothing, but take everything |
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I must also question your knowledge of the exchange rate. Quote:
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