davefoc
Philosopher
I am just basically thinking wouldnt a more successful product producing company replace them and fill the void left by GM's terrible business practices?
To me it just seems the nature of business, and prolonging it is sort of unfair to the businesses who are doing all the right things and making the better choices. These Companies should be at the forefront and should be receiving money to help continue their better ways.
I feel the money could be better spent on successful companies then those that are failing...
I think a lot of the people that have posted to this thread agree somewhat with this.
I think there might be an argument to be made where some extraordinary event has led to the temporary destabilization of an industry that a short term government assistance package might have value.
One argument is that the sum of the various economic problems to hit the US is this kind of occurence and if the car companies are just provided with some kind of bridge loan they will return to profitability.
Unfortunately, that doesn't seem to be the case here. The labor unions and management have cooperated for many years now in a kind of capital burning enterprise where shareholder equity and eventually the very operating underpinnings of the organizations were expended to keep going. What happened to bring this to forefront was some bad economic times which caused the scheme to come undone somewhat before it might otherwise have.
But when the reality of the situation began to take hold there was a lot less enthusiasm for just tossing money at the problem when the problem was so much deeper than a sudden unexpected down turn.
So now Bush has thrown a few billion dollars to Chrysler and GM. They won't fail on his watch, but he also didn't require them to make any commitments toward sustainability. Undoubtedly what the unions and management would like would be to continue to burn through capital, but now they'd like to burn through tax payer capital .
My guess, is that the Democrats will facilitate them for awhile, partially at least, thanks to the cover that Bush has given them. Eventually, the Democrats will abandon them, because in the end dumping billions of dollars into failed enterprises with deeply embedded problems will be a net national loser for them and they are not going to lose national elections because of UAW craziness.
What is particularly difficult to understand was bailing out Chrysler. What purpose does this organization have any more? Its management has shut production down ostensibly for a month. Will Chrysler management really start production back up again? For what, to make more cars that people already aren't buying? My suspicion, is that most of the 4 billion dollars will go to pay UAW workers for sitting at home and doing nothing and possibly to help Chrysler's owners save a few bucks before they shut the place down for good. It might have been better to just shut the place down now and use the 4 billion dollars to help the affected workers, mostly to help them leave Detroit and go some place not dominated by a destructive organization like the UAW.