โMay-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 nationโs 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) โ 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.
โMay-24-2014 12:34 PM
bmanning wrote:Ron3rd wrote:
The Tow Vehicle forum used to be the most interesting part of this forum IMO, but know it's filled with more and more if this nonsense. Very few informative posts, just nonsense.
Eventually you'll do what I did Ron; I used to check the forum daily, now it's once every few weeks. Same nonsense gets recycled over, and over, and over...
โMay-24-2014 07:17 AM
NJRVer wrote:Francesca Knowles wrote: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...
It's even sadder when you look at the historic statistics at the site that article got its info from- here's the curve for the last ten years:
Source
Very interesting chart.
Right after Jan. '09 things start the steady recovery, while right after June '06 they crash and burn.
Who was in office during those two time frames?
Whose policy looks like it worked and whose looks like it didn't?:)
โMay-23-2014 08:51 PM
Ron3rd wrote:
The Tow Vehicle forum used to be the most interesting part of this forum IMO, but know it's filled with more and more if this nonsense. Very few informative posts, just nonsense.
โMay-23-2014 06:30 PM
NJRVer wrote:
Very interesting chart.
Right after Jan. '09 things start the steady recovery, while right after June '06 they crash and burn.
Who was in office during those two time frames?
โMay-23-2014 05:53 PM
Francesca Knowles wrote: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...
It's even sadder when you look at the historic statistics at the site that article got its info from- here's the curve for the last ten years:
Source
โMay-23-2014 05:11 PM
โMay-23-2014 12:07 PM
โMay-23-2014 11:11 AM
โMay-23-2014 09:37 AM
โMay-23-2014 06:36 AM
โMay-23-2014 06:35 AM
โMay-23-2014 05:31 AM
โMay-23-2014 04:11 AM
Perrysburg Dodgeboy wrote:
This will be my last post as nothing I say will change your mind or vise versa.
Don
โMay-22-2014 05:58 PM
spoon059 wrote:
Your argument is based upon one of two theories;
#1 GM owners will never buy another car.
#2 Ford/Chrysler/Toyota/Honda/Kia/etc will produce more vehicles to take over GM's market share without hiring any new employees or increasing parts bought from (former) GM suppliers.
You do understand that it is a domino effect right. When the vendors stop receiving their checks form BOTH companies not just GM then bad things hit the fan. Your theory is not taking in the fact that had the Fed's not stepped in BOTH GM and Chrysler would have closed.
Neither theory holds much water to me.
FYI...
#1 In 2012 GM had 77,000 employees based upon my research, not a quarter million. Sorry was looking at GM's total employment 221,000+ globally. The source I looked at did not post just the US numbers.
#2 Yes, they will no longer receive paychecks from GM. If they get hired by Ford, for example, they receive a paycheck from Ford. Back when this was all going down Ford had people laid off also. So sorry no one was going to Ford, Honda (people on LO there also) Toyota no idea if they had people laid off but I bet they did. So again no one would be getting hired. No one was buying to many cars at this time.
#3 If they have new jobs, they can pay their mortgage
#4 Again... not a quarter million or a half million... 77K. We are still refusing to believe that there is a chance they get hired by another auto manufacturer who needs to increase their market share...
#5 Again... I argue that JOBS aren't going to be lost if GM goes out of business, just paychecks from GM. Someone else will need to hire additional workers to handle increased output from larger market share. Again companies would have to be in the hiring mode and they were not. Think I'm wrong, just look at Knowles graphs for the proof.
#6 Vendors that used to supply that GM PS pump now supply Ford with PS pumps. Vendors continue to get paid. Maybe there is some temporary discomfort while they re-tool... Such is life. again you lack of manufacturing shows here. You need cash to retool, no machine builder or tool shop will be making tools for someone with no cash flow. And you can bet your last dollar that every machine builder and tool shop knows who you work for.
#7 Again... why do we assume that GM goes out of business and those jobs are LOST and that market share disappears? Where is any evidence to support this theory??? see above, no one was hiring
#8 Ummmm... okay? That is what most of the economists were saying, that is the ones that did not have agendas any way.
#9 Sounds horrible, guess the sky is falling? bet you don't think there is Global Warming either right?
Where are your FACTS to support your claims? All you have is a theory of what could have happened. Lets be real, do you really honestly believe that GM owners will never fix their old cars (because that would still supply jobs for vendors, which you argue cannot possibly happen) or buy new non-GM cars? again look at Knowles graph we were in one of the worst recessions in history. Keep your head in the sand that way you can't get hit with the falling skies.
I simply don't believe that those options are viable. Indian went out of business. People lost jobs. Owners were upset. Harley filled in that market share. Harley hired more people than Indian ever employed. Life goes on. so you're comparing a few hundred people to the loss of millions. Remember GM was global Chrysler not so much at that time. That domino effect thing again.