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40108   Reality   2013 Dec 10, 1:03am  

tatupu70 says

Reality says

No, that's not what Ford needed to survive when GM was bailed out. That was the pay-off money (and similarly to every other major carmakers in the world) for not letting the other carmakers take a dib on carving up GM. In other words, those payouts should also be added to the cost of bailing out the union members at GM.

lol--was the $16B that the Fed gave them also a payoff?

http://jalopnik.com/5704575/ford-bmw-toyota-took-secret-government-money

Of course it was. That was what I was referring to as "similar handouts to almost every other major caramaker in the world." That was hush money paid out at the big boys table to make it "fair to everyone," everyone at the big boys table, that is. Of course all at the expense of people who were not at the table!

Considering the average new car cost more than $30k nowadays, who do you think benefit the most from those handouts to the financing arms? Besides the executives and finance guys, those who can afford to buy/lease new cars frequently benefit at the expense of those who buy used cars and/or keep cars for a long time. In other words, another instance of ripping off the poor and the middle class to enrich the already wealthy.

40109   edvard2   2013 Dec 10, 1:10am  

Reality says

What are you saying? That no car model should ever go out of production? You should feel right at home in the 1980's USSR, when their factories were still churning out copies of American cars made in the 1950's . . . because when the bureaucrats are the sole decision maker on capital obsolescence, nothing is ever allowed to be obsolete!

Again- some simple assumptions. Every time a new redesign of a model comes out its not like the entire car is actually new. All automakers have what are known as "platforms", which is to say a basic chassis or vehicular configuration that is used for the underlying structure of sometimes multiple models. On top of that those models might undergo several model redesigns but still use the same generation of platform. Some platforms are used for decades. For example, Chrysler was using some platforms that had been developed by AMC ( American Motor Corporation) in the 70's and early 80's right up until not too long ago.

So in that case, many suppliers will make what amounts to the exact same part for decades. Perhaps the sheetmetal, engine, and interiors might change, but things like body panel clips, swing arms, steering wheel hubs, spindles, brake calipers, and power steering pumps can be in production for a very long time. Its also not just platforms but engines, transmissions, and suspension components.

So you see, its not like with every model change those suppliers suddenly all re-tool. They are often setup creating the same parts for decades and to assume they would suddenly totally change overnight is a simplistic assumption.Reality says

No, you are the one making unfounded and counter-factual guesses. Overhauling automakers, and even entire auto industries, have been taking place in many parts of the world many times over. The result is always leaner operation, higher productivity, and better products for consumers.

How was I making a "guess"? If you had made the choice then millions of people would have immediately been out of work and what would have definitely happened would be a huge cost in the form of unemployment insurance.

As far as leaner operations, higher productivity, and better products, both GM and Ford had been doing exactly that leading up to the recession. Most of the products GM currently sells- of which many are selling very well- were developed well before the recession. That the recession came along was poor timing on a well-orchestrated turnaround in the works.

40110   tatupu70   2013 Dec 10, 1:13am  

Call it Crazy says

No, that is what has happened in every other industry where a company goes bankrupt... All the workers, suppliers, dealers switch over to a different company...

I see. That's why unemployment is still stubbornly high and worker participation is low. Because the workers seemly moved to a different company. Do you live in the real world??

Call it Crazy says

Exactly.... Just look at the auto industry, how many other car makers or start-ups have moved into buildings formerly run by a competitor?

Of course. Nobody is arguing that companies should never go bankrupt. Implying otherwise is typical for you and Reality though.

40111   Reality   2013 Dec 10, 1:15am  

tatupu70 says

Reality says

Companies that can not meet payroll should be bankrupted because they leverage too much and take too much risk with their worker's well being. The corporate officers engaged in such behavior should be arrested if any dereliction of duty is found.

That's fine. Like I said--don't cry when you're in the unemployment line or eating at the soup kitchen when your benefits run out.

LOL. You think I pay myself "benefits"? Why go to an "unemployment line"? What is an "unemployment line"? Sounds like a waste of time to gravitate towards where there is already a surplus of people looking for jobs. Go find something you can do for your neighbors and get paid for it! Hopefully get paid handsomely for it because nobody else has yet thought of offering such a service at such a "great price" that is appealing to your customers yet highly profitable for yourself! That's how new jobs are created, not filing paper wasting time at the unemployment line waiting for a government pacifier to suck on.

40112   anonymous   2013 Dec 10, 1:17am  

Why do we allow some businesses to fail? Put the politics aside? Just end the discussion, its purely political

40113   tatupu70   2013 Dec 10, 1:18am  

Reality says

Go find something you can do for your neighbors and get paid for it!

Good luck with that. All your neighbors are in the unemployement line that you are unfamilar with. None of them have any money to pay you, despite your admirable attitude.

Let me know how Says "Law" works when everyone is broke.

40114   anonymous   2013 Dec 10, 1:19am  

RentingForHalfTheCost says

10B is nothing! We burn though that in 10/85th of a month (or less than 4 days). What the hell is everyone complaining about. The Fed could buy GM every 3 weeks (market cap of 56B). Geez

Good point. But the fed and their actions are just the boogeyman. No effect on anything, whatsoever

40115   tatupu70   2013 Dec 10, 1:20am  

Call it Crazy says

How long have you been living under that rock?? Workers don't move to another company when their current company closes?? Really??

Clearly not. You're the one who talks about the worker participation rate. Do you disagree that there are lots of people out there looking for jobs right now?

Do you think if GM went bankrupt, that number would be larger?

40116   tatupu70   2013 Dec 10, 1:21am  

Call it Crazy says

Well, who gets to "cherry pick" which one lives or dies through bankruptcy... The government??

Well, really we do. We elect our representatives.

40117   edvard2   2013 Dec 10, 1:22am  

errc says

Why do we allow some businesses to fail? Put the politics aside? Just end the discussion, its purely political

Because this was all about money. LOTS and lots of money. The simple question is:

Would you rather have paid more or less?

Its really that simple. Sure- had GM and Chrysler been allowed to fail maybe some right-wingers would have felt all warm and fuzzy inside... until the costs of having allowed that to happen would have been recognized.

40118   Reality   2013 Dec 10, 1:26am  

edvard2 says

All automakers have what are known as "platforms", which is to say a basic chassis or vehicular configuration that is used for the underlying structure of sometimes multiple models. On top of that those models might undergo several model redesigns but still use the same generation of platform. Some platforms are used for decades. For example, Chrysler was using some platforms that had been developed by AMC ( American Motor Corporation) in the 70's and early 80's right up until not too long ago.

Thank you for the gratuitous lecture on car platforms. I have no idea what you mean by "not too long ago." The change over was in the mid-1990's. How long have you been hiding under a rock? two decades? Platforms updates are becoming more frequent in the last decade and half. Platform engineering is gradually giving way to modular engineering that can be updated much quicker. Including for engines, even each cylinder as a module. If a supplier is still stuck in the platform business model, it is indeed a good time to go bankrupt, as the tooling would be quite obsolete already.

edvard2 says

How was I making a "guess"? If you had made the choice then millions of people would have immediately been out of work and what would have definitely happened would be a huge cost in the form of unemployment insurance.

Or get rid of "unemployment insurance" altogether. It's just a system that attract people gaming the system and take 6mo to a year vacations.

edvard2 says

As far as leaner operations, higher productivity, and better products, both GM and Ford had been doing exactly that leading up to the recession. Most of the products GM currently sells- of which many are selling very well- were developed well before the recession. That the recession came along was poor timing on a well-orchestrated turnaround in the works.

LOL, I suppose you would consider farmers who failed to harvest quickly enough and lost crop to the arrival of winter just a case of bad timing for the earth's tilted axis.

40119   mell   2013 Dec 10, 1:27am  

errc says

RentingForHalfTheCost says

10B is nothing! We burn though that in 10/85th of a month (or less than 4 days). What the hell is everyone complaining about. The Fed could buy GM every 3 weeks (market cap of 56B). Geez

Good point. But the fed and their actions are just the boogeyman. No effect on anything, whatsoever

Hehehe.

40120   tatupu70   2013 Dec 10, 1:28am  

Reality says

LOL, I suppose you would consider farmers who failed to harvest quickly enough and lost crop to the arrival of winter just a case of bad timing for the earth's tilted axis.

Yes, because the timing of recessions is just as well known as the seasons.

I'll give you this--at least you are consistent with your poor analogies.

40121   Reality   2013 Dec 10, 1:29am  

edvard2 says

errc says

Why do we allow some businesses to fail? Put the politics aside? Just end the discussion, its purely political

Because this was all about money. LOTS and lots of money. The simple question is:

Would you rather have paid more or less?

Its really that simple. Sure- had GM and Chrysler been allowed to fail maybe some right-wingers would have felt all warm and fuzzy inside... until the costs of having allowed that to happen would have been recognized.

Addressed this issue already: the bailout was merely a kick of the can down the road. It will come up soon enough again, given the industrial over-capacity and channel stuffing.

40122   Reality   2013 Dec 10, 1:32am  

tatupu70 says

Reality says

LOL, I suppose you would consider farmers who failed to harvest quickly enough and lost crop to the arrival of winter just a case of bad timing for the earth's tilted axis.

Yes, because the timing of recessions is just as well know as the seasons.

Longer seasonal cycles. GM financing arm was on the frontline of making car loans and home loans to uncreditworthy borrowers. What do you think would come next? If the practitioner could not expect what was bound to come next as consequence of those uncreditworthy loans, they deserved to go bankrupt.

40123   anonymous   2013 Dec 10, 1:32am  

edvard2 says

errc says

Why do we allow some businesses to fail? Put the politics aside? Just end the discussion, its purely political

Because this was all about money. LOTS and lots of money. The simple question is:

Would you rather have paid more or less?

Its really that simple. Sure- had GM and Chrysler been allowed to fail maybe some right-wingers would have felt all warm and fuzzy inside... until the costs of having allowed that to happen would have been recognized.

Unemployment insurance is paid by payroll taxes, by people that work, just in case they find themselves out of work. It wouldn't have been so great unthinkable cost an order of magnitude greater than the bailouts.

Don't confuse unemployment insurance as some sort of welfare.

40124   edvard2   2013 Dec 10, 1:38am  

Reality says

Thank you for the gratuitous lecture on car platforms. I have no idea what you mean by "not too long ago." The change over was in the mid-1990's. How long have you been hiding under a rock? two decades? Platforms updates are becoming more frequent in the last decade and half. Platform engineering is gradually giving way to modular engineering that can be updated much quicker. Including for engines, even each cylinder as a module. If a supplier is still stuck in the platform business model, it is indeed a good time to go bankrupt, as the tooling would be quite obsolete already.

Clearly you don't given that some platforms that Chrysler used in the 70's and 80's were still being used into the 2000's. The Ford Panther platform was used from 1978-2011, a full 30+ years. Not sure what you mean by "platform engineering is giving way to modular engineering" seeing as how every single current product model car on the planet utilizes some sort of platform. The term "platform" is generic. That would be like someone saying: " Oh yeah? Well frames in houses are now giving way to modular design." So exactly what do you think a "module" is anyway? Technically speaking its about making components in advance for a product- so in other words- mass manufacturing akin to an assembly line. I believe Henry Ford had this whole... " Modular design" thing down pat about 100 years ago. So pleased to find that you have discovered this unique concept. Reality says

Or get rid of "unemployment insurance" altogether. It's just a system that attract people gaming the system and take 6mo to a year vacations.

Your argument has now jumped the shark.

40125   Reality   2013 Dec 10, 1:40am  

tatupu70 says

Call it Crazy says

How long have you been living under that rock?? Workers don't move to another company when their current company closes?? Really??

Clearly not. You're the one who talks about the worker participation rate. Do you disagree that there are lots of people out there looking for jobs right now?

Do you think if GM went bankrupt, that number would be larger?

First of all, GM did go bankrupt, for the conventional creditors. So the old folks who had savings in GM bonds were shacked without getting anything from the sale of GM plants to would-be buyers. Having lost that principle, along with the loss of interest income thanks to FED ZIRP policy, the oldster savers are having less money to spend . . . therefore less jobs for the youngsters who would otherwise have jobs working for the oldster savers. On top of that, the oldster savers may have to look for Walmart greeter jobs, in direct competition against the youngsters! All this for what? To save the privileged income of banksters and some union members.

40126   kashif313   2013 Dec 10, 1:48am  

Mark D says

whatever happened to that perma-bear theory that rents only go up with income (chart #1)?

wait until the dollar bubble bursts (within 10 years according to my estimate) then watch the rents skyrocket when my mortgage remains the same.

If the dollar bursts, within 10 years, as you say; where will Japan, Europe and China be?

40127   Reality   2013 Dec 10, 1:48am  

edvard2 says

Clearly you don't given that some platforms that Chrysler used in the 70's and 80's were still being used into the 2000's. The Ford Panther platform was used from 1978-2011, a full 30+ years.

These are rare extreme exceptions for special purpose vehicles, like the the Crown Vic taxi car. There are always old tech special purpose vehicles. If a company's business model consistes of living off those extremely aged platforms selling as new cars, it deserves to go bankrupt at any time. The AMC platforms that you were talking about in your previous post were replaced in the mid-1990's, two decades ago.

Not sure what you mean by "platform engineering is giving way to modular engineering" seeing as how every single current product model car on the planet utilizes some sort of platform. The term "platform" is generic. That would be like someone saying: " Oh yeah? Well frames in houses are now giving way to modular design." So exactly what do you think a "module" is anyway? Curious minds want to know.

Modular engineering in carmaking means major components that are interchangeable and independently upgradable, unlike the previous platform engineering approach. BMW's "flexible manufacturing" led the new engineering approach.

40128   bob2356   2013 Dec 10, 1:51am  

edvard2 says

Lastly, there is hardly an auto manufacture on earth that has not at one time gotten some sort of government bailout. Auto companies are important because they have an enormous economic impact on the countries the exist in and in each instance of those bailouts the decision was made not because of political ideology, but because of picking the better financial outcome of a bad financial situation.

Governments record of picking better financial outcomes is not what I would call great. The makers of horse drawn wagons had an enormous impact in the countries they existed. Should the ones that failed to make the decision to switch to cars have been bailed out? Companies that make bad business decisions should be in bankruptcy. If they can't work out a plan with the creditors to emerge then they should cease to exist.

You guys are all missing the point anyway. The 10.5 billion didn't save GM, it allowed the gm UAW workers to continue to have higher compensation than at the other automakers. Read up on the bailout and who got what. The UAW as a creditor got a very skewed percentage of the bailout at the expense of other creditors. Had the gm workers been cut to the industry average compensation the government wouldn't have lost a dime. That makes the bailout a calculated political play rather than any kind of altruistic concern for workers's jobs. Follow the money.

Anyone (there are many right here on patnet) who thinks that all the bailouts, auto and financial, were done on some kind of carefully considered basis after large amounts of analysis by industry experts needs to read neil barofsky's book. He was the ig for tarp. The amount of fast and loose playing with huge amounts of taxpayers money under paulson and geitner is pretty shocking. There are many times when word handout is more appropriate than than the word bailout. Want even better reading try Billionaires & Ballot Bandits: How to Steal an Election in 9 Easy Steps. Especially the parts about how romney made millions on the bailouts he condemned. and his hedge fund campaign contriibuters made billions. Follow the money.

40129   tatupu70   2013 Dec 10, 1:52am  

Reality says

First of all, GM did go bankrupt, for the conventional creditors

True--poor choice of words.

Reality says

Having lost that principle, along with the loss of interest income thanks to FED ZIRP policy, the oldster savers are having less money to spend

The interest income is low but so is the inflation rate. That's what happens during a recession. Oldster savers are not the drivers of an economy anyway.

40130   tatupu70   2013 Dec 10, 1:53am  

bob2356 says

Companies that make bad business decisions should be in bankruptcy.

No kidding. Why do people keep arguing this as if anyone disagreed???

40131   mell   2013 Dec 10, 1:57am  

tatupu70 says

bob2356 says

Companies that make bad business decisions should be in bankruptcy.

No kidding. Why do people keep arguing this as if anyone disagreed???

Because they aren't, and a whole bunch of them.

40132   edvard2   2013 Dec 10, 1:57am  

Reality says

These are rare extreme exceptions for special purpose vehicles, like the the Crown Vic taxi car. There are always old tech special purpose vehicles. If a company's business model consistes of living off those extremely aged platforms selling as new cars, it deserves to go bankrupt at any time. The AMC platforms that you were talking about in your previous post were replaced in the mid-1990's, two decades ago.

Those were two examples of many others. You are incorrect about some of AMC's platforms as well, with one, for example used in the Dodge Intrepid well into the 2000's. Reality says

Modular engineering in carmaking means major components that are interchangeable and independently upgradable, unlike the previous platform engineering approach. BMW's "flexible manufacturing" led the new engineering approach.

This is nothing new. This in fact has almost always been the case right up to the advent of the auto assembly line. For example, Ford made numerous versions of the "Windsor" family of engines that ranged from V6 and V8 models and in many cases the same components were used. As a classic car owner myself I can attest to this, seeing as how many parts that will fit a 302 also happens to fit the 289, 351, and others.

40133   tatupu70   2013 Dec 10, 2:01am  

mell says

tatupu70 says

bob2356 says

Companies that make bad business decisions should be in bankruptcy.

No kidding. Why do people keep arguing this as if anyone disagreed???

Because they aren't, and a whole bunch of them.

Not sure what you are trying to say there...

40134   Reality   2013 Dec 10, 2:01am  

tatupu70 says


Having lost that principle, along with the loss of interest income thanks to FED ZIRP policy, the oldster savers are having less money to spend

The interest income is low but so is the inflation rate. That's what happens during a recession.

Not the consumer staples, and most certainly not medical expense.

Oldster savers are not the drivers of an economy anyway.

Unemployment takes place on the margins. Oldsters are the biggest net consumers, especially on discretionary spending.

40135   HEY YOU   2013 Dec 10, 2:08am  

Maybe,soon, we will totally exit both wars on which the Republicans happily enjoyed spending $4-$6 trillion.
Hope you Rep/Con/Teas enjoy dumping this tax burden on your children & grandchildren.
I forgot! We don't have to fund anything.

Cypher this. What % of $4 trillion is $10 Billion?

40136   Tenpoundbass   2013 Dec 10, 2:12am  

That's the problem with Keynesian economics, what happens next is a black box for them, they have no clue or idea what the end game is. Well they know, but by then those that create the Keynesian policies have already cashed out and living on an island.
While free markets are left to clean up the mess.

Anything is only worth what someone is either willing to pay, or capable of paying. Right now there's just too many "Willing" to pay high prices.

If home prices drop, then there will be many people who had to take their lumps. If home prices drop and it becomes too expensive to build, then the leaches, roaches and rats that have the natural and manufactured resources out of touch with fundamentals, will just have to pull out those investments as well. And the price becomes based on supply and demand.

If you make drywall, either you'll meet the demand at what ever price, or you'll simply fold and let another innovator take over who can meet those demands for that new set price.

Keynesian love to strike fear in everyone, if their standard of living falls, then all hell will break lose. And 90% of the bastards they preach that shit to, stand absolutely nothing to lose. In fact they would stand more to gain by the reality. As a seat at the Keynesian economic structure table is closed club, that takes an act of congress to get a seat at the table, to sell your solar panels, batteries, wind mills and god knows what all else.

Lets be clear they damn sure don't make things more affordable.

Supply and Demand will have its final say.

40137   bob2356   2013 Dec 10, 2:12am  

edvard2 says

Those were two examples of many others. You are incorrect about some of AMC's platforms as well, with one, for example used in the Dodge Intrepid well into the 2000's

No not at all true. There were no common parts between the premier platform and the lh platform. Castaing used many idea's from the premier like engines mounted longitudinally, but no parts or tooling.

40138   Reality   2013 Dec 10, 2:18am  

edvard2 says

Those were two examples of many others. You are incorrect about some of AMC's platforms as well, with one, for example used in the Dodge Intrepid well into the 2000's.

If you are referring to Dodge Intrepid (and the LH platform), then you are arguing for me: the buyout of AMC by Chrysler did not end the LH platform.

edvard2 says


Modular engineering in carmaking means major components that are interchangeable and independently upgradable, unlike the previous platform engineering approach. BMW's "flexible manufacturing" led the new engineering approach.

This is nothing new. This in fact has almost always been the case right up to the advent of the auto assembly line. For example, Ford made numerous versions of the "Windsor" family of engines that ranged from V6 and V8 models and in many cases the same components were used. As a classic car owner myself I can attest to this, seeing as how many parts that will fit a 302 also happens to fit the 289, 351, and others.

Nothing is ever new if you look back far enough. Even the electric car pre-dated the gasoline engine. The devil is in the details.

40139   tatupu70   2013 Dec 10, 2:19am  

Reality says

Not the consumer staples, and most certainly not medical expense.

Overall inflation rate is low. Some things rise faster than the rate, some slower. That's why it's called a weighted average.

40140   edvard2   2013 Dec 10, 2:20am  

bob2356 says

No not at all true. There were no common parts between the premier platform and the lh platform. Castaing used many idea's from the premier like engines mounted longitudinally, but no parts or tooling.

The LH platform was used on the Chrysler Concorde, Chrysler LHS, Chrysler 300M, Dodge Intrepid. The LH was in fact derived from an older AMC/Renault design. But even if we were to entertain the notion that the LH platform shared little with original, the fact is that the LH platform was used for decades in of itself, which then would back up the previous claim I had made previously that platforms and often components are manufactured for decades on end.

40141   Reality   2013 Dec 10, 2:21am  

tatupu70 says

Reality says

Not the consumer staples, and most certainly not medical expense.

Overall inflation rate is low. Some things are higher than the rate, some are lower. That's why it's called an weighted average.

How many new computers can an oldster buy and eat?
That's why "weighted average" is meaningless and prone to fraud when weighted by a bunch of bureaucrats.

40142   anonymous   2013 Dec 10, 2:22am  

HEY YOU says

Maybe,soon, we will totally exit both wars on which the Republicans happily enjoyed spending $4-$6 trillion.

Hope you Rep/Con/Teas enjoy dumping this tax burden on your children & grandchildren.

I forgot! We don't have to fund anything.

Cypher this. What % of $4 trillion is $10 Billion?

But we had to go into those wars. Can you imagine what the cost of not engaging in those wars would have been??

40143   anonymous   2013 Dec 10, 2:23am  

Those wars provided tons of jobs and economic activity. Had we not gone to war, the world probably would have stopped spinning.

40144   Reality   2013 Dec 10, 2:24am  

edvard2 says

The LH platform was used on the Chrysler Concorde, Chrysler LHS, Chrysler 300M, Dodge Intrepid. The LH was in fact derived from an older AMC/Renault design. But even if we were to entertain the notion that the LH platform shared little with original, the fact is that the LH platform was used for decades in of itself, which then would back up the previous claim I had made previously that platforms and often components are manufactured for decades on end.

The buyout of AMC by Chrysler did not abort the LH development. So what's your objection over some better management team taking over GM? in whole or in parts.

40145   edvard2   2013 Dec 10, 2:24am  

Reality says

If you are referring to Dodge Intrepid (and the LH platform), then you are arguing for me: the buyout of AMC by Chrysler did not end the LH platform.

Quite the contrary actually, for if you were to read my previous response then you'd see that while yes- the AMC platform was the basis for the LH platform, that platform was itself used for decades, which further reinforces my previous statements.Reality says

Nothing is ever new if you look back far enough. Even the electric car pre-dated the gasoline engine. The devil is in the details.

Way to try to back out of a previous assertion by making bland and generalized comments. You were previously trying to suggest that "Modular engineering" is something totally new and different from platform design. A platform is a platform is a platform. Its the same as today with electronics in that almost every TV, stereo system, computer, and so on use a chassis to mount the surrounding electronic components and outer casing. You could take a radio from the 1920's and it too will also have a chassis, and just like cars, the same chassis design will often be employed across models. So what you were asserting earlier was sort of meaningless to start with.

40146   edvard2   2013 Dec 10, 2:28am  

Reality says

The buyout of AMC by Chrysler did not abort the LH development. So what's your objection over some better management team taking over GM? in whole or in parts.

Because that option was NOT on the table. At the time of GM's bankruptcy, there were no offers from any other company to buy them. So the option was to either liquidate the company or to keep them from going under.

All I know is that I and probably the majority out there are very pleased that the sort of ideas you seem to be alluding to were not employed. Political ideology makes for very poor economics.

40147   HEY YOU   2013 Dec 10, 2:28am  

I'll have to invest before I read about anything I'm investing in."

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