jeninflorida
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Feb 17, 2003
- Posts
- 22,463
is it time for the big 3 to go away?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
If we were prepared to clean up and soften the mess such an event would bring I'd say, 'yes'.
But we're not. Ad keeping them alive is likely to be cheaper than cleaning up the mess.
if the big 3 does fail, or if 1 fails will that push the economy into a 2nd great depression? or life under the carter years?
The Carter years saw some bad things... but this is not the same at all. There was massive inflation caused, by most accounts ( I am NOT an economist) by factors including the oil crunch, the spending throughout the sixties and early seventies in Vietnam and the emergence of competitors for US products on the international level. Interest rates were very high, but credit was available at those rates. The current situation is quite different.
for example, the unemployment rate...with the Big 3 fuctioning... is at 6.7%. In Dec. 1978, it was at 6.0. It didn't reach 6.7 until April 1980 and was actually higher under Reagan (reaching 10.8) than it ever was under Carter.
If the Big 3 go down, 11% is scarily possible.
is it time for the big 3 to go away?
That all time 'conservative' favorite; tax cuts.
Like the $800 million GM received early in The Bush administration. At that time, so I understand, GM was sitting on $6 billion in cash.
...Doesn’t the union hold fault to a large part of the problem? The cost structure for the union is out of whack and that part of the reason the big 3 is unable to compete on price...
For nothing. It was just a retroactive tax cut and tax cuts are always good.
You can read about it here.
Well, we have public health care here in Canada. And it works just fine. We spend 9% of our GDP on health care as opposed to 14% in the U.S. All our health stats are better than the U.S. as well.
I don't know where you get the idea that it takes five public servants to do the work of one private worker. I've encountered plenty of both and I've found idiocy and good service from both.
Shrugs. One of those things I can't understand. The belief that 'those people' are some how fundamentally different from 'the good guys'. They're all people.
Well, we have public health care here in Canada. And it works just fine. We spend 9% of our GDP on health care as opposed to 14% in the U.S. All our health stats are better than the U.S. as well.
I don't know where you get the idea that it takes five public servants to do the work of one private worker. I've encountered plenty of both and I've found idiocy and good service from both.
Shrugs. One of those things I can't understand. The belief that 'those people' are some how fundamentally different from 'the good guys'. They're all people.
First, there are a very large number of unemployed who quickly bankrupt Michigan.
i find it funny that the big 3 ceo's were roasted, and granted they needed to be. each flying in on a private jet asking for money....what were they thinking flying in on private jets? It just goes to show how out of touch with reality the big 3 are….
I couldn't even believe that when I heard it. Yeah, second time around they drove in hybrids, but I was watching a news story here before work one morning and one analyst said that one of the CEO's (don't remember which one) gets paid $1,000/hour.
So even driving was costing a lot more money that it should. A round trip ticket, first class, from Detroit to Washington, D.C. runs around $900. Way cheaper still.
They need to sell off all their corporate jets, their two summer homes and any unnecessary perks that cost the companies money. I doubt that'll happen though.
As far as if they should be 'gotten rid of'? No. Too many companies rely on the big three as suppliers. Hell, even the company I work for has a small percentage of business with them....not enough to effect us if they go under, but still.
Oh and it's been said that even if they do get these loans, chances are that 90,000 - 100,000 + people will still end up out of a job. On top of the 500,000 + (not just auto workers) who were laid off last month alone.
I couldn't even believe that when I heard it. Yeah, second time around they drove in hybrids, but I was watching a news story here before work one morning and one analyst said that one of the CEO's (don't remember which one) gets paid $1,000/hour.
So even driving was costing a lot more money that it should. A round trip ticket, first class, from Detroit to Washington, D.C. runs around $900. Way cheaper still.
They need to sell off all their corporate jets, their two summer homes and any unnecessary perks that cost the companies money. I doubt that'll happen though.
As far as if they should be 'gotten rid of'? No. Too many companies rely on the big three as suppliers. Hell, even the company I work for has a small percentage of business with them....not enough to effect us if they go under, but still.
Oh and it's been said that even if they do get these loans, chances are that 90,000 - 100,000 + people will still end up out of a job. On top of the 500,000 + (not just auto workers) who were laid off last month alone.
...on the flip side, when will these guys earn $1/year?
...
If I might ask one question.
Why does anyone need a 6 or 8 litre car in New York?
(please take it that I understand about fuel economy for long runs etc.)