Partha wrote:The 2.5 million was the number of potential losses in the long term if the big 3 reduced their output by 50% and never regained ground.
Way to move them goalposts, considering that the article said it would be 2.5 million in the first year. And now 'regained ground'? If they go bankrupt, what ground exactly do they regain?
You're interchanging GM going bankrupt with all three going bankrupt again. If GM goes into a government managed liquidation then Ford and Chrysler can obviously regain ground over time because they are still functioning.
Once again, you seem to think that GM will fold as a seperate entity and that other car companies will both A) pick up the slack that hasn't been shown to be there, considering that auto sales are down damn near 50% already for several companies*, and B) have the money to buy (which they don't) or the financing either from banks or the government to buy (which banks aren't and if you're giving government money away anyways, why not do it in a way that maximizes the number of jobs left, seeing as it's a recession?).
Exactly - the sales are down 50% anyway, so that's 2.5 million lost (assuming your article is correct), which then makes your argument even more absurd that GM going under would be 3 million MORE than not going under. If you're arguing that it's just 3 million compared to the good times then you're just an idiot because you're counting jobs that are lost anyway whether you allow bankruptcy or not. If that's the case, spit it out, because I'm arguing against your apparent position that allowing a GM bankruptcy would cost 3 million jobs more than the position of not allowing it.
As for "maximizing the number of jobs left" - it's stupidity. You do that by simply nationalizing everything in the country and ensuring everyone has a job. Remember, Socialism guarantees 100% employment. So, instead of putting forward some dumb argument about making sure jobs are paid for by the government, the best option is to work towards the best chance for the industry to recover and not require further bailouts in the years to come. The only way to do that is a complete restructuring of the entire industry that eliminates the ridiculous labor overheads that are endemic in Detroit.
Fact is, whether you allow a bankruptcy or not that restructuring has to happen if you expect US auto manufacturing to survive another decade. The UAW will bitch and moan but they're a walking political corpse that will have to come to the cold realization that they're in a global market and they can't price their own members out of a job.
I don't, and most economists are on my side in this argument.
Actually, most economists are on my side as far as I've seen, where my side is that letting GM go into controlled bankruptcy would NOT result in 3 million job losses more than not doing it.
In the first year. Evidently you are allowed to claim long-term periods to support your case, but I'm not, even though I never specified a time-frame. Ok. Fair debating tactic there.
Oh noes - you lose an argument and cry unfair. Get over yourself.
I would love to see your proof, Herr Doktor.
I stipulated the government would ensure the others don't fail. Are you saying the government doesn't have that ability, yet magically has the ability to bail out all three? If I have to prove common sense to you then forget it.
I have never said this was only about GM.
Bullshit. You clearly stated that GM going bankrupt would cost three million jobs. If you misspoke or didn't properly qualify your statement then just say so, because my position has been and always was that GM alone going bankrupt will not cost 3 million jobs and that number is pure hyperbole of the sort that got us into the Iraq War.
It's your firm belief that the UAW must be broken
No it isn't. Stop putting words into my mouth. The UAW must recognize they are not in a monopoly position on labor and act accordingly. You know - face reality?
someone will buy the hulks of the bankrupt companies even though they have no money.
The government has no money to enact a restructuring? Since when?
It's my firm belief that if one goes bankrupt, a ton of the supply chain will go bankrupt - and that supply chain is not GM exclusive.
...
Because if one goes right now, more than likely two or possibly even all three go in today's market.
Absent external influence, yes. That's never been my position though, so quit beating strawmen already.
The House bill is quite good
Not good enough for the Senate, apparently.
Dd