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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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#58 | ||
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#59 | |
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I used to be Dragoneye...
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![]() "but they are unable/unwilling to restructure their business to compensate for the market changes" This is absolutely, unbelieveably WRONG. Just 3 things?? How about 6 off the top of my head. Keep in mind there are MANY more...that we don't know of due do us...*not* being in the business... 1: They've renegotiated contracts with the UAW, essentially replacing a lot of the older workers with lower-paid (half-paid, actually $15/hr) new guys. 2: They've shifted the massive healthcare burden onto the union, as well. In the form of this VEBA plan, GM has no obligation to pay out anymore healthcare costs for all those retired workers come 2010. 3: They've improved their product portfolio drastically. Nearly every new vehicle they've come out with in the past 3-4 years has been garnered with some sort of award, or recognition in quality. Their theory, as per Bob Lutz and others, is to build a great product and the money will come to them, as opposed to the old way of thinking: cut corners to save costs. 4: According to the guys in charge; 18 out of 19 new releases (or something like that) will be cars or crossovers...is that not shifted towards the market enough? 5: They've streamlined management, focusing the 8 brands into 4 heirarchys of management. Saving costs, and improving efficiency. 6: They've cut jobs (both white and blue collar), and closed slow plants to tighten up efficiency in order to save some dough. Absolutely, I'm sure more can be done; and no -- they're not perfect. But that can be said of any business...If the housing market hadn't collapsed, gas prices hadn't shot through the roof for no reason, and the economy hadn't begun this implosion; in other words, if they hadn't been hit by this "perfect storm" as some like to call it, I believe there was a good chance GM was going to return to profitability if not this, then next year. Their vehicles are among the best on the market, and their advertising started to show it. But nobody is buying them right now...so none of it matters. The loans most likely meant to hold them over untill 2010 and a much improved market/economy...they've done nearly everything else already. |
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#61 | |
![]() ![]() Drives: Impala Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Pittsburgh, Pa.
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The only other thing that would give credence to your statement would be volume, and trust me, you don't want to go down that road. judging an employee by volume is what gets you sh!tty product...especially in the automotive industry. There should be some kind of labor standard to be sure. Some kind of base quota they would have to make volume wise thats reasonable. But when you start judging a worker based on volume more then quality, thats when the consumer suffers...and the companies reputation also. Speaking of labor standards...I'm a Teamster that works in the warehousing industry. ALMOST ALL union shops in the USA carry a labor standard for this very reason. Ours specificlly is a time standard. The company and the union each bring in a group of engineers to figure out the time it takes to do our job. non union shops dont have this. most have a incentive program that leads to high volume and horrendous saftey practices. trust me, i used to work in a non union shop till i wised up. ive seen someones foot get ripped off by a hi-lift because the dink was trying to make incentive bonuses. Not. Good. |
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#62 | |
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I used to be Dragoneye...
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...By asking that question, though, you're mixing in a whole extra industry and their motives + abilities. I mean, how many private equity firms are in a position to freely loan out $25 billion or more to a high-risk venture in this current economy? How many private companies are willing to take that sort of a risk on such a behemoth of a company? (If you or I were in a position to do so...would we??) I doubt it's their business plan that's deterring them...but the fact that they are, in any event, losing money hand over fist and can't seem to stop the bleeding. I don't know the exact figures...but the market has decreased from 17 billion cars to below 12 billion in not much over a year!!! Holy-crap!! That's like removing 30% of your paycheck next year without telling you. Good Luck! ![]() The ONLY thing that is going to save them, imo...is a better economy and an improved car market because of it. This loan should be used to tide them over to that point...again, in my opinion.... |
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Let the damn company(s) fail and we will all be better off in the long run. |
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#64 |
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didn't we bail out Chrysler in the 80's? that seemed to work out well...
at least for 20 some years... i say loan it to them, make them use some type of collatrel to secure the loans, if they fail anyway, we can recoup some $$ |
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#65 |
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This is another misinformation. TOYOTA HONDA and NISSAN have unions in Japan but not here.
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#67 | ||
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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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#68 | |
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After that, consider all of the money the companies, dealers, and suppliers pay in taxes. Tens to hundreds of billions will disappear. You just counted to a million, so multiply that time by a factor of 10 and then that number by a factor of 100. Can you even imagine the good our country has been doing us with that money that will disappear? We're talking about educational funding, financial aid, food stamps, subsidies, roads, national defense and investments. Can you imagine losing one of those? Let's have a country without food stamps for the 5 million people that won't find a job for the next 8 years. Losing that much of the population's employment status will cause enormous problems for other industries as well. Soon, you'll see companies that make uniforms for auto employees go under; you'll see clothing retailers go out of business for lack of sales; you'll see grocery stores collapse because all people can afford are ramen noodles. These are bad times. Without the auto industry—yes, they are all tied together, so try losing just one of them—we are all screwed. We're looking at something far worse than the Great Depression if we fail to stop the collapse of major domestic industries. We're looking at an end to American influence overseas. We're looking at a reactionary twist in history that would make America more agrarian than it is industrial. We're looking at the country we know not being a country at all. Is that what you want? Fine—let's abandon our auto companies. 5 million lives will change immediately, and everyone else's will change thereafter. Is that really what you want?
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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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#69 | ||
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Yes, 5 million lives could change dramatically, but you assume that change will only be for the worst. Some of those people will find that they are happier in another field and realize they never really liked the job they had, they just liked the paycheck. Doom and gloom. Armageddon is what will happen if we allow a business to fail. Please. Times will be extremely difficult for some, maybe many, but the country will not collapse. Last edited by garagelogic; 11-18-2008 at 12:23 AM. |
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#70 |
![]() ![]() Drives: Both American Made Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Texas
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