May-16-2014 05:40 PM
News report wrote:
General Motors recalls another 2.7 million vehicles
The latest action covers eight different models and brings the number of vehicles recalled this year by the nation’s largest automaker to more than 11.1 million in the United States and 12.8 million worldwide. That put GM on course to break its 2004 domestic recall record of 11.8 million vehicles, the company said.
News report wrote:
DETROIT (AP) — General Motors has added yet another recall to its growing list for the year.
The recall of 218,000 Chevrolet Aveo subcompact cars is the company's 29th this year, bringing the total number of recalled GM vehicles in the U.S. to around 13.8 million. That breaks GM's previous annual record of 10.75 million set in calendar year 2004.
May-22-2014 04:47 PM
spoon059 wrote:
FYI, the American car industry nationwide only employed just over 3/4 of a million people in 2012. That is across all brands and parts suppliers...
Here is my source
http://blogs.cars.com/kickingtires/2012/07/american-made-index-which-automakers-affect-the-most-us-w...
May-22-2014 04:25 PM
May-22-2014 04:21 PM
Perrysburg Dodgeboy wrote:
Damn Spoon you just can't get it can you. Lets do this by the numbers.
Don
May-22-2014 03:30 PM
fx2tom wrote:Perrysburg Dodgeboy wrote:
Damn Spoon you just can't get it can you. Lets do this by the numbers.
1: GM and Chrysler close their doors laying off over 250,000 direct workers and another 250,000 indirect workers (these are very conservative numbers).
2: The sub pay GM and Chrysler direct hourly workers get, stops.
3: These people can no longer make their mortgages/rent, car payments, or pay their bills.
4: The banks now have 500,000 or so mortgages, car loans and credit cards not being payed. What do you think that will do the the banks?
5: Unemployment that was already taxed to the hilt before GM & Chrysler closed their doors. Now they will be bankrupt do to the new claims being filed. So you know the Feds were already subsidizing State unemployment.
6: The vendors that already were waiting 90+ (more like 180) days for their bills to be paid are not going to get anything and they too close their doors. Terryallan should be able to attest to this.
7: Now with even more people losing their jobs the already slow auto market stops dead along with everything else. So without sales how is Ford and the rest going to sell their cars. You do understand that the massive recession the WORLD was in, not just the USA is the reason GM and Chrysler could not get their loans refinanced right?
8: Now the whole Country along with the World dives into a massive depression.
9: Even jobs that were recession proof like your's are laying people off.
Note: number seven, if you don't have any customers you can't sell any cars and you can't hire anyone. But lets not let anything like the facts get in the way.
Don
There is a difference in not getting it and disagreeing
You may feel you are right but so does Spoon. There is absolutely no reason to be disrespectful about it.
I also notice you are from Ohio and this is a subject that hits quite close to home, keep that in mind when answering
May-22-2014 03:26 PM
Perrysburg Dodgeboy wrote:
Damn Spoon you just can't get it can you. Lets do this by the numbers.
1: GM and Chrysler close their doors laying off over 250,000 direct workers and another 250,000 indirect workers (these are very conservative numbers).
2: The sub pay GM and Chrysler direct hourly workers get, stops.
3: These people can no longer make their mortgages/rent, car payments, or pay their bills.
4: The banks now have 500,000 or so mortgages, car loans and credit cards not being payed. What do you think that will do the the banks?
5: Unemployment that was already taxed to the hilt before GM & Chrysler closed their doors. Now they will be bankrupt do to the new claims being filed. So you know the Feds were already subsidizing State unemployment.
6: The vendors that already were waiting 90+ (more like 180) days for their bills to be paid are not going to get anything and they too close their doors. Terryallan should be able to attest to this.
7: Now with even more people losing their jobs the already slow auto market stops dead along with everything else. So without sales how is Ford and the rest going to sell their cars. You do understand that the massive recession the WORLD was in, not just the USA is the reason GM and Chrysler could not get their loans refinanced right?
8: Now the whole Country along with the World dives into a massive depression.
9: Even jobs that were recession proof like your's are laying people off.
Note: number seven, if you don't have any customers you can't sell any cars and you can't hire anyone. But lets not let anything like the facts get in the way.
Don
May-22-2014 03:17 PM
May-22-2014 03:08 PM
waynec1957 wrote:
I don’t come to this forum to discuss politics; I get plenty of that in other venues. So I’ll make this my last comment in this thread.
My background is, for the past 20 plus years I’ve studies politics, political theory, political economy, and globalization. At first it was just something in was interested in but as time went on, without even realizing it, I started to get deeper into these subjects. When I retired from GM 8 years ago this all became a second career, mostly teaching and doing research. This doesn’t make me any smarter than the next person. All it means is I’ve delved deeper into these topics than the average Joe or Jane and while I have my own personal beliefs, it gives me a perspective a lot of folks don’t have…nothing more, nothing less.
I see and hear a lot of people throw around the term “socialism”, most often in in association with “big government”. In theoretical terms socialism doesn’t have a thing to do with “big government”, but in American politics it has become a catch phrase that means nothing because it encompasses everything. In other words, most people don’t know what it means they just use it as an insult.
But let’s assume for the sake of argument socialism DOES mean “big government” to most people. All of us to some extent enjoy the benefits of “big government”—the roads we travel on, the bridges we cross, the rest parks we stop at, the state and national parks we camp at, and some of folks have begun to collect that social security check every month (all of which are made possible through taxation). Anyone can expand this list, but the point is we do not, and I don’t think most people would want to, live in a pure capitalist or pure socialist society. In fact, nowhere in the world does there exist a “pure” capitalist or “pure” socialist economy, certainly not according to this “big government” definition.
The question then is not WHETHER the government (any government) should be involved in the economy (or private enterprise), but to WHAT EXTENT and WHERE. This is the root of the argument, and to be frank, I don’t think a lot of people don’t think this one through. Someone mentioned foreign automakers receiving subsidies from their governments. One reason for this is other industrialized countries take a different approach to this question. Another is businesses in other industrialized countries typically have a business plan that covers decades versus the 3-5 years American businesses have.
Businesses in other industrialized countries typically focus on long term growth and are not as vulnerable to dips in the global market. US businesses on the other hand must focus on making the shareholders happy in the (relative) short term which makes them extremely vulnerable to dips in the global market. Governments in other industrialized countries have policies in place that help soften the blow of (relative) short term economic downturns (for both employers and workers), outside of unemployment and food stamps, the US does not.
I could ramble on about this a lot longer, but I’ll finish with this. Consider the GM recalls being discussed here. A “pure market” solution to these problems, absent any kind of government involvement, would be something like “if enough people die from these defects people would stop buying GM products (exercising choice in the free market) and GM would be forced, of their own accord (in response to market signals) to fix the problems or go out of business”. Instead, we have government instituted safety standards that dictate these recalls. Personally…I prefer the latter.
May-22-2014 02:25 PM
May-22-2014 01:54 PM
goducks10 wrote:
Spot on. And may I add for those that say the GM/Chrysler jobs would've been snatched up by the other auto makers. How long would that have taken? So the estimated 1,000,000 workers loose their jobs and have to collect unemployment for how long before the other auto makers can hire them. 3, 6, 9 months? A year? My guess is all those workers that just lost their jobs could end up losing their house as well. It would've been a huge ripple effect. JMHO.
May-22-2014 01:41 PM
Perrysburg Dodgeboy wrote:Charlie D. wrote:Perrysburg Dodgeboy wrote:
If you want to get upset read this!!!
That is nearly 2 years old. Got anything more recent.
The "bail out" is five years old, your point is what?
Don
May-22-2014 08:44 AM
goducks10 wrote:Perrysburg Dodgeboy wrote:spoon059 wrote:Perrysburg Dodgeboy wrote:
If the banks would have refinanced GM and Chrysler we 2 would not be having this conversation.
Don
And if GM or Chrysler had better management practices at the time they wouldn't have had the sudden and urgent need for a massive influx of capital. They would have been able to sell a product for a profit and been in possession of their own capital, thus not needing a bailout. I guess that little point doesn't factor into your argument very well though...
Miss management and the union pond scum had nothing to do with it. Fords loans came do before the Banks locked their vaults. In order for Ford to get their loans refinanced the Ford Family had to put up their personal property and stake in Ford to secure the refi. BTW two thumbs up to the Ford family!
GM and Chrysler did not have that option and it's a good thing for Chrysler GM didn't. Had GM been able to secure their refi, Cerberus Capital would have sold off the Ram and Jeep lines to the highest bidder then closed the rest.
When the Government was looking for someone to take over Chrysler Corp Nissan steeped up and said they would take Ram and Jeep only. They were told take it all or nothing so they walked away. So enter Fiat, looking to get their foot back in the USA what better way then to take over Chrysler. Unlike what some of the uninformed think it did cost Fiat money, just not up front. Fiat has pumped tons of cash into Chrysler and our plants.
No matter what Spoon and others think, had GM and Chrysler closed the effect on the US economy would have been devastating. Remember nobody was buying anything at that time. People that had jobs were so scared that they were forgoing any larger purchases. So the other car manufactures would not have picked up anything and all but the largest of GM and Chrysler's suppliers would have closed their doors. This would have then started a domino effect and spread not only though the US but the world. Think I'm full of BS? Do some research there is a reason why everyone was pushing for the bailout, even people that didn't like GM and Chrysler.
Don
Spot on. And may I add for those that say the GM/Chrysler jobs would've been snatched up by the other auto makers. How long would that have taken? So the estimated
1,000,000 workers loose their jobs and have to collect unemployment for how long before the other auto makers can hire them. 3, 6, 9 months? A year? My guess is all those workers that just lost their jobs could end up losing their house as well. It would've been a huge ripple effect. JMHO.
May-22-2014 08:37 AM
goducks10 wrote:Perrysburg Dodgeboy wrote:spoon059 wrote:Perrysburg Dodgeboy wrote:
If the banks would have refinanced GM and Chrysler we 2 would not be having this conversation.
Don
And if GM or Chrysler had better management practices at the time they wouldn't have had the sudden and urgent need for a massive influx of capital. They would have been able to sell a product for a profit and been in possession of their own capital, thus not needing a bailout. I guess that little point doesn't factor into your argument very well though...
Miss management and the union pond scum had nothing to do with it. Fords loans came do before the Banks locked their vaults. In order for Ford to get their loans refinanced the Ford Family had to put up their personal property and stake in Ford to secure the refi. BTW two thumbs up to the Ford family!
GM and Chrysler did not have that option and it's a good thing for Chrysler GM didn't. Had GM been able to secure their refi, Cerberus Capital would have sold off the Ram and Jeep lines to the highest bidder then closed the rest.
When the Government was looking for someone to take over Chrysler Corp Nissan steeped up and said they would take Ram and Jeep only. They were told take it all or nothing so they walked away. So enter Fiat, looking to get their foot back in the USA what better way then to take over Chrysler. Unlike what some of the uninformed think it did cost Fiat money, just not up front. Fiat has pumped tons of cash into Chrysler and our plants.
No matter what Spoon and others think, had GM and Chrysler closed the effect on the US economy would have been devastating. Remember nobody was buying anything at that time. People that had jobs were so scared that they were forgoing any larger purchases. So the other car manufactures would not have picked up anything and all but the largest of GM and Chrysler's suppliers would have closed their doors. This would have then started a domino effect and spread not only though the US but the world. Think I'm full of BS? Do some research there is a reason why everyone was pushing for the bailout, even people that didn't like GM and Chrysler.
Don
Spot on. And may I add for those that say the GM/Chrysler jobs would've been snatched up by the other auto makers. How long would that have taken? So the estimated 1,000,000 workers loose their jobs and have to collect unemployment for how long before the other auto makers can hire them. 3, 6, 9 months? A year? My guess is all those workers that just lost their jobs could end up losing their house as well. It would've been a huge ripple effect. JMHO.
May-22-2014 08:31 AM
May-22-2014 08:25 AM
Fordlover wrote:Perrysburg Dodgeboy wrote:Fordlover wrote:
The author says that Loan = Bailout. Interesting. Wrong, but interesting.
Both GM and Chrysler received "loans" it guys like you say tagging the word "bailout" to them. Both companies have repaid their loans, Chrysler's a lot sooner than anyone elses I might add.
If Ford is doing so well then repaying 14 billion should be no problem right? Why are they taking so long to repay it?
Loans are to be repaid, with interest. This is what Ford's deal was.
If what GM recieved was a Loan, then the Taxpayer got screwed on the return. That, my friend, is the difference between a loan and a bailout.
Chrysler did very good, by paying back every dollar of the bailout. Anyone who believes GM did the same is delusional.
May-22-2014 08:13 AM
Perrysburg Dodgeboy wrote:Fordlover wrote:
The author says that Loan = Bailout. Interesting. Wrong, but interesting.
Both GM and Chrysler received "loans" it guys like you say tagging the word "bailout" to them. Both companies have repaid their loans, Chrysler's a lot sooner than anyone elses I might add.
If Ford is doing so well then repaying 14 billion should be no problem right? Why are they taking so long to repay it?