Originally posted by: MetalMat
My fellow people, how long are we going to let the govt use our money for these things? I think it is getting close to having an old fashion lynch mob up on capitol hill!
Originally posted by: coolVariable
Originally posted by: GroundedSailor
It is estimated that 70% of the parts that go into a car come from suppliers. And these suppliers further depend upon their suppliers for sub parts / materials etc. Think how many suppliers will go under, and the impact on the economy, if GM were to go under.
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Originally posted by: Socio
What ticks me off is they have already been given billions and made no changes to help themselves with that money. They should have been left alone and forced to restructure, shrink themselves down to a more self sufficient status.
Originally posted by: smack Down
It really doesn't matter if it cost 100 billion for bankruptcy and 50 cents to bail them out. The US government should not be held hostage.
Originally posted by: Chunkee
Originally posted by: MetalMat
My fellow people, how long are we going to let the govt use our money for these things? I think it is getting close to having an old fashion lynch mob up on capitol hill!
"You cannot legislate the poor into freedom by legislating the wealthy out of freedom. What one person receives without working for, another person must work for without receiving. The government cannot give to anybody anything that the government does not first take from somebody else. When half of the people get the idea that they do not have to work because the other half is going to take care of them, and when the
other half gets the idea that it does no good to work because somebody else is going to get what they work for, that my dear friend, is about the end of any nation. You cannot multiply wealth by dividing it."
~~~~~ Dr. Adrian Rogers, 1931 ~~~~~~~
QFT!!!
Originally posted by: Squisher
Originally posted by: smack Down
It really doesn't matter if it cost 100 billion for bankruptcy and 50 cents to bail them out. The US government should not be held hostage.
Whether you and I like it or not the government is closely intertwined in all of our lives and has made and will continue to make decisions about things that seem they should keep their noses out of.
The notion that the government should spend $100 billion, some of which is mine, just to stand on some altruistic principle and for the pleasure of seeing an entire region of the country suffer through a full blown 1930's depression that will surely drag down the rest of the country seems a little sadistic and masochistic.
Michigan unemployment is at 10.6%, if GM goes under it'll go to 20+%. There is no one outside of the government to provide DIP money for chapter 11 and I doubt anyone wants to buy more than a few tertiary assets under Chapter 7.
Originally posted by: coolVariable
Originally posted by: Squisher
Originally posted by: smack Down
It really doesn't matter if it cost 100 billion for bankruptcy and 50 cents to bail them out. The US government should not be held hostage.
Whether you and I like it or not the government is closely intertwined in all of our lives and has made and will continue to make decisions about things that seem they should keep their noses out of.
The notion that the government should spend $100 billion, some of which is mine, just to stand on some altruistic principle and for the pleasure of seeing an entire region of the country suffer through a full blown 1930's depression that will surely drag down the rest of the country seems a little sadistic and masochistic.
Michigan unemployment is at 10.6%, if GM goes under it'll go to 20+%. There is no one outside of the government to provide DIP money for chapter 11 and I doubt anyone wants to buy more than a few tertiary assets under Chapter 7.
Yup. the ripple effect through the financial industry will also be enormous when all of those assets vanish into thin air. Bail them out and turn all the states they operate in into right-to-work states! The unions must be broken!
It's the unions fault the big three are not profitable.
even more
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Originally posted by: SickBeast
I just did the math on the Canadian bailout of the auto industry.
Based on the initial $4 billion that our government has promised the industry, that works out to $200,000 for each of the 20,000 employees of GM and Chrysler here in Canada.
Now, they are saying they will give them an extra $3 billion. That works out to $375,000 per employee. The government will never recoup that in taxes even if each employee works for 40 years for GM or whatever.
IMO the money would be better spent elsewhere, and if nature runs its course, companies like Honda and Toyota will create new jobs to fill the gap.
I would assume that in the US the figures are similar to what I just quoted in terms of cost per job saved.
Originally posted by: SickBeast
I just did the math on the Canadian bailout of the auto industry.
Based on the initial $4 billion that our government has promised the industry, that works out to $200,000 for each of the 20,000 employees of GM and Chrysler here in Canada.
Now, they are saying they will give them an extra $3 billion. That works out to $375,000 per employee. The government will never recoup that in taxes even if each employee works for 40 years for GM or whatever.
IMO the money would be better spent elsewhere, and if nature runs its course, companies like Honda and Toyota will create new jobs to fill the gap.
I would assume that in the US the figures are similar to what I just quoted in terms of cost per job saved.
Originally posted by: Genx87
Originally posted by: Veramocor
Government should come up with a special bankruptcy plan (GM only screw Chrysler one bailout only). Call it chapter X or something. GM declares a chapter 11 like bankruptcy, the government guarantees warranty claims, government supplies a restructuring loan. In exchange the government gets 1st payment status on the loans and a percentage of the company.
In this quasi chapter 11 GM can ditch dealerships, unwieldy union contracts, and excess brands.
Or you can let the company file and restructure or be split up abd consumed into other more healthy competitors. I see the govt getting involved as prolonging the pain. Much like a cancer patient being pumped full of medicine to live 1 more day.
As long as I'm on P&N, don't think you've seen the last.Originally posted by: Carmen813
Originally posted by: Genx87
Originally posted by: Veramocor
Government should come up with a special bankruptcy plan (GM only screw Chrysler one bailout only). Call it chapter X or something. GM declares a chapter 11 like bankruptcy, the government guarantees warranty claims, government supplies a restructuring loan. In exchange the government gets 1st payment status on the loans and a percentage of the company.
In this quasi chapter 11 GM can ditch dealerships, unwieldy union contracts, and excess brands.
Or you can let the company file and restructure or be split up abd consumed into other more healthy competitors. I see the govt getting involved as prolonging the pain. Much like a cancer patient being pumped full of medicine to live 1 more day.
Woohoo another cancer metaphor!
Originally posted by: Skoorb
All car companies have to react to a long term reduction in demand for cars. It will be a long while before demand for vehicles is at the numbers it was before this recession. That is indisputable, and the companies cannot possibly maintain size for a 14M car market if it's only at 10M. They have to slash production and workforces. That is the only way. You wouldn't take somebody with pancreatic cancer, pump them full of Vitamin B, and expect them to win an Olympic gold, and this is 100% exactly the same thing.
Numbers The average car was and probably is still similarly about 9.2 years old. That's not the median, though. I think its number would be different and possibly higher. I cannot find google results on median. One link said the same as average (because the author of one of them didn't understand the difference).Originally posted by: BoberFett
Originally posted by: Skoorb
All car companies have to react to a long term reduction in demand for cars. It will be a long while before demand for vehicles is at the numbers it was before this recession. That is indisputable, and the companies cannot possibly maintain size for a 14M car market if it's only at 10M. They have to slash production and workforces. That is the only way. You wouldn't take somebody with pancreatic cancer, pump them full of Vitamin B, and expect them to win an Olympic gold, and this is 100% exactly the same thing.
I don't understand why people can't see the simplicity of the current situation. Credit cards are maxed and the Home Equity ATM has been shut down. There's simply no money to spend. Everyone has overconsumed for a long time and the economy has to contract. It has no choice.
We can pump money into the car companies but they're not going to sell any more cars than they were. Everybody has a practically new car. How many beaters do you really see on the road these days? Just looking around everything looks 2000+ model year. So why do we think we can drive demand by increasing supply? It's almost like Democrats have become *gasp* supply siders!!!