We Now Reward Failure
Steve Chapman writes at reason on the bizarre turn we've taken in rewarding the Big Three Automakers for sucking:
Their high costs and inferior reputation for quality have hindered them in competition for some 30 years. So in good times and bad, they lag behind more efficient rivals.The financial losses they've compiled recently convey an unmistakable message from consumers: We are no longer willing to buy your vehicles at a price that pays you to make them--if we are willing to buy them at all. The Big Three had a fat inheritance, and they managed to blow it.
Their overseas competitors, by contrast, had to start from zero selling cars in the United States, find customers, prove the worthiness of their vehicles and dealers--even, in many cases, build factories here and train American workers to meet their standards.
Some companies, foreign and domestic, couldn't hack it. You don't see dealers selling Ramblers, Fiats, or Renaults anymore. But many did exactly what our capitalist system requires them to do, only to be rudely informed that the requirements have changed. Instead of being rewarded for their achievements, they now watch as the government rewards failure.
Helping these two automakers means harming the rest. The market for new cars has shrunk and it's not going to regain its old size anytime soon. By rescuing GM and Chrysler, the government is taking future sales away from competitors. If one automaker gets the fatted calf, another one will have to do without.
In a normal market economy, things would proceed differently. The weak firms would file for bankruptcy and be forced to take drastic measures to cut their costs. They would shrink even more than they proposed last week and might even shut down.
These developments would be a bad thing for their shareholders and employees but a good thing for consumers. Competing carmakers would have the chance to hire their workers, purchase their factories, take over their dealerships, and attract their customers. The economy would also benefit, because resources Chrysler and GM were wasting would be used more productively.
Instead, the government has impeded this process--managing a neat combination of bad economics and blatant unfairness. In 21st-century America, it's good to be the prodigal son.







On 2/3/09 President Obama talked about the failure of bank executives.
Rewarding Bank Management for Failure
His stern response to the irresponsibility, short sightedness, corruption, and self-dealing of big-bank executives (his view), in order to punish failure and restore confidence in the banks, was to limit their compensation to $500K plus stock options.
Even this will apply only if those companies get more money, not the money given in the past, and only if they are given "extraordinary help" in the future, not just the usual bailout help.
Take that, you bank executives! Be sure that if you screw up again, I will arrange to punish you even more harshly, say by limiting your use of the executive washrooms.
Andrew_M_Garland at February 25, 2009 7:52 AM
I have no sympathy for anyone at either of those two car companies. Even the "little guys" (union workers) made three times as much money as everyone else. The rest of us live in a world where we have to constantly ask ourselves if we could make the same money somewhere else if we lost our jobs. If I was that grossly overpaid, I'd enjoy it, but I'd be living on what I was really worth and banking the rest. These people were lucky to have thwarted the laws of supply and demand for as long as they did. I feel no sympathy for them - it couldn't last forever, and they were stupid if they didn't know that.
Pirate Jo at February 25, 2009 10:48 AM
Pirate Jo-
I shared this with Amy a while ago but I'm sure you'll appreciate it.
http://www.woodenboat.com/forum/archive/index.php/t-47928.html
juliana at February 25, 2009 12:10 PM
I have no sympathy for the auto companies as I distinctly remember their whining beginning in the 1970's, when the Japanese began importing smaller, more fuel-efficient vehicles and kicking their butts in the market.
The government came to the rescue, imposing tariffs that forced Toyota, et al to raise prices. Detroit then matched the price hike for their domestic cars, took the profits, and continued to ship what they were shipping.
Over time, Toyota and Honda came to the US and built factories, employing Americans who paid income and local taxes to their communities. In a brilliant retort, Detroit recently shipped thousands of jobs to Brazil.
Gog_Magog_Carpet_Reclaimers at February 25, 2009 2:10 PM
My mistake, the Japanese were exporting, and we were importing. Fury has messed with my typing, and I don't mean the Plymouth.
Gog_Magog_Carpet_Reclaimers at February 25, 2009 2:12 PM
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