Aharami
Lifer
Originally posted by: iamwiz82
Originally posted by: JLGatsby
Originally posted by: Looney
Oh yeah, the fact that they made inferior cars had nothing to do with it:
# Of the 31 cars that earned top rating, 29 were Japanese. Of these, 15 were from Toyota and its Lexus division and eight were from Honda. Some redesigned or new Japanese models from Toyota and Honda, however suffered "first-year blues." The new Scion tC and the redesigned 2005 Acura RL, Toyota Avalon, and Honda Odyssey earned only average reliability scores, for example.
# Of the 48 cars that earned the lowest rating, 22 carry American nameplates, 20 are European, 4 are from Japan (all from Nissan and its Infiniti division), and 2 are from South Korea.
http://www.consumerreports.org/cro/cars...t-in-car-reliability-1005/overview.htm
http://money.cnn.com/2004/11/08/pf/autos/cr_auto_reliability/
Ready for an economic lesson? Here comes.
When you pay your labor more average, in order to compete price wise (price of the cars compared to foreign cars), you have spend less on parts.
American cars fall apart because they use inferior parts because they spend too much on labor.
Make sense? Class dismissed.
Actually, US and Foreign owned US plants have similar wages, and foreign automakers spend more on health care.
care to back that up? pay might be equal...but I was ALWAYS under the impression that US healhcare costs/pension costs are the highest