My first reaction to this news was probably similar to most of you, in that I felt a bit of sympathy for Mr. Wagoner. But now it occurs to me that this man was in positions of high authority over GM over the exact 30 years that the company went from the largest and best automobile company in the world, to an industry joke. So today, President Obama states that the problem at GM is a lack of leadership, and ironically, he is correct.
The US auto industry began its decline in the early ‘70s, with its late ‘60s cars being the last of its quality products. From the mid-70s on, GM became the producer of good trucks (and the SUVs created on those platforms) and nothing else; the car segment of that industry became a standing joke of low quality, insipid design and horrendous workmanship. The real question that needs to be asked is, what changed?
I don’t intend to discuss the US auto industry in depth; but below are 4 questions, that I believe, if answered honestly, explain what has happened to GM: 1.Compare and contrast the majority of people that worked in the factories and built the cars, the blue-collar workers that worked at GM in the 1950s and 60s, between the majority of the ones that worked there between 1970 and 2010: what are the primary differences?
2. Compare and contrast the majority of managers and executives, the white-collar employers that worked at GM from the 1940s to 60s, to the majority of the ones that worked there between 1970 and 2010: what are their primary differences?
3. Compare and contrast the majority of buyers, the middle class consumers that bought GM products from the 1940s to 60s, to the majority of the ones that bought GM products between 1970 and 2010: what are the primary differences?
4. Compare and contrast American society as a whole (the American culture in general), i.e., the typical set of common “principles” and “convictions” held by the majority of people from the 1940s to 60s, to the majority between 1970 and 2010: what are the primary differences, and how have those difference manifested themselves within academia, buisness, the media, politics and the aesthetic direction taken within the arts? Of course, you bright folks will probably guess that the answer to number 4, in a sense, answers the previous 3 questions; but I think it’s important to go through the questions that have the more concrete answers, before leaping to the question with the more abstract answers. And exactly what sympathy am I to supposed to have for GM; a company that of its own accord has chosen to be primarily subsidized by government money, a company within which not a single one of its prominent executives or share-holders have risen to protest in behalf of property rights and econmoic freedom, a company where not a single voice has been heard against governement intrusions and the poor decisions made by the GM executives.
And now, today, the CEO of that company, the CEO of that failed company, today he was “asked “to step down by government officials; and what am I to conclude from this?
I suppose I'll conclude that todays events are nothing more than the law of casuality - in action.
Howard
(Edited by Howard Campbell on 3/30, 11:39am)
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