Originally posted by Oerdin
Isn't producing the same (or roughly similar) cars for less money the very definition of greater efficiency?
Isn't producing the same (or roughly similar) cars for less money the very definition of greater efficiency?
GM produces 7 million cars a year that sell for 140 billion dollars a year. Toyota produces 7 million cars a year that sell for $130 billion. (these figures are made up but represent the general values). Does this make Toyota better or worse? Shouldn't they want to sell the same number of cars for more money? Is GM selling better cars for more money or equivalent cars at a higher price?
Equivalent cars from GM and Toyota sell at about the same price. Otherwise people would buy the cheaper car. The mere fact that GM sells more cars than Toyota implies that their equivalent cars must be priced lower.
The fact that GM shareholders don't make any profit on those cars does not mean anything about efficiency of manufacturing.
The Japanese make cars with fewer man hours largely because they use more robots.
What the Japanese do is buy more parts from small manufacturers and then assemble them with fewer Toyota employees. So, yes, there are less people who work for Toyota than work for GM. But on the other hand there are more workers making car parts in Japan (and Asia) than there are making car parts in the United States.
The Japanese simply outsourced earlier than we did. And it resulted in economic disaster. Widespread deflation required huge bailouts to the actual automakers of Japan---- the small scale parts makers and the rest of the economy outside the headline companies.
Robots which the UAW are militantly against because they eliminate jobs.
If you notice the Japanese (and Germans and even Hyundai's new factory) were all placed in states with almost no union membership precisely because they wanted to avoid the unions.
But who cares what they like? Management isn't in the business of maximizing my wealth. Or the wealth of my county. It is in the business of maximizing its own wealth. And they do a good job at it, regardless of who else it hurts---- shareholders, workers, the country at large.
You know another group of people who do a good job of maximizing their own wealth at the expense of others? Pirates. Yar matey!
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