Bfgrn
New member
That's bullshit. I had and still do have family working in the auto industry. The cost of labor wasn't nearly as significant as the fact they made cars people didn't want to buy. The cost of labor wasn't an issue when gas was a buck 75 a gallon and people were buying the GM land yachts. When Gas hit $4/gallon and no one wanted those big gas guzzlers and sales dropped of the cliff then high labor costs became an issue. Ford survived cause they made the necessary changes to the market place and the still pay high union wages (and guess what? Non-union shops like Honda, Toyota, BMW, & Hyundai pay comparable wages in this country cause they know if they don't they'll be unionized.) but they were selling cars people actually wanted to buy. If you think GM and Chrysler drove off the cliff due to unions then stick to the petroleum business. You're acumen doesn't cross over to manufacturing.
The cost of labor...here's a guy that knows...
Health Care
Health care: an issue that cries out for leadership.
Health care in this country is in shambles. At a cost of almost $12,000 a year for the average family, the system is bankrupting families and it's bankrupting companies - specifically my old industry. Take General Motors. They're currently paying out $1,525 per vehicle for health care. Compare that to the $201 Toyota is paying and it sounds even more absurd. And what about those families and individuals who can't afford insurance at all? Junior breaks his arm and all of a sudden, a fall off a bike is an $8,000 trip to the ER.
Despite all of this, none of our politicians will touch the issue. Oh sure, they'll talk about it during campaign season, but once the votes are cast, it's the forgotten issue again. The last time anyone proposed real reform was in 1993, and that plan went nowhere. Fourteen years later, Hillary Clinton's failed plan is still used as an excuse to continue ignoring the problem. That's disgraceful.
I suggest you listen carefully to the '08 candidates' "plans" for health care. Let's see if any of them have the political courage to really tackle it this time around. I don't want band-aid ideas either. I want concrete solutions - and I want to hold these guys to their promises.
http://www.leeiacocca.com/thoughts-on-leadership/health-care.aspx