Originally posted by: Stunt
Originally posted by: Paddington
Umm... I don't think GM ever pretended they were all unique vans built seperately from scratch. The Buick is a bit more costly than the rest, as it has some luxury appointments, and different suspension/tuning. The other three are about the same and cost a similar amount. They're vans for different dealers.
GM's bloated brands are doing nothing but adding cost to the consumer;
Have any proof of that? I think making a couple of different variants adds very little cost to GM, and if anything cuts prices lower, because now there are more dealers selling essentially the same product, increasing competition and lowering prices.
The automotive market is competitive enough for GM, it doesn't need to drive prices lower on itself. They are barely turning a profit and are practically giving their cars away. (financing, etc)
Like you said "now there are more dealers"...more dealers = more inventory, more staff, more service staff, more property costs. Toyota, Honda, Nissan have less than half the brands GM does; are they hurting/struggling? Hardly.
Not to mention the administrative costs for each brand, the added cost to make marginally different parts, lower volumes at the plant level, etc. A separate model is only justified if it can offer the customer more value or features another product cannot give them. GM is not taking customers from their external competitors...if anything they are competiting against themselves...as you said.
The best argument against your point is your own words...heh.