I do not see anyone booking a flight to DC and ask for funding for these lesser businesses that truly represent the width and breadth of the global economy. If Ford, GM, Chrysler or others fail then simply there was a reason for it.
If Ford fails the reason for it was the government letting the banking and lending industry run hogwild and cause a total collapse of the economy. Plain and simple. I don't know how much further I can articulate that.
This is not a business model or management decision or wage structure thing anymore. When you run a business that requires a constant flow of cash in the tens of billions of dollars to fund ongoing operations, and reckless disregard throws
the entire economic system into chaos, it's an ill-conceived idea to punish the punished and reward the perpetrators. These guys do $400 billion dollars in revenue a year building products that require constant massive capital expenditures and have to deal with hundreds of thousands of employees. And incessant layers of costly government regulation around the globe.
You can't look at this situation and say "The auto companies need to adapt," without assessing the effect of the Wall Street meltdown. We've essentially authorized $700 billion to socialize the losses of a bunch of guys who took on hundreds of billions of dollars in chopped up "assets" they didn't understand but figured "**** it, we'll pass them on and on and on until they're so far away we don't care", and now we're quibbling that
loaning $25 billion to prevent several hundred thousand job losses in an already severe economic recession. I'm with you on principle, but the discounting that is being given to the effect of the Wall Street debacle is maddening.
It's just a funny and ****ed up situation. I guess it just depends on where you're from. People are pissed Rick Wagoner took a jet to Washington D.C, but nobody seems to give a shit the public is exposed to $249,000,000,000 in potential losses from Citigroup, or that Paulson authorized billions upon billions of handouts to his old banking industry buddies to "free up the credit markets", who subsequently, because of a complete and total lack of oversight, just hoard it and use it to buy smaller banks. What a joke.
I'm with you on the consumption tax but it will never happen.