Posts Tagged ‘Union Leaders’

Obama – Union Leader at the Fontainebleau Resorts Miami Beach


2009
11.05

It is surreal .   It is beyond belief.

Are Americans as foolish and downright stupid as it appears to take this storybook pablum from their elected political leaders.  Its as if you have your moronic boss as your political leader.

It can be noted and said that a main reason that there are no more than 2 political parties in the American political system is that is akin to having two drug stores in a country town.  Country town usually have one drug store or two never three.  One drug store is OK.  Two allows for trouble making customers to swing between stores – and is a good thing for the owners of the pharmacies .  In addition it allows for long weekends in the summers for one or other outlets to close .  Its all for convenience of the profit makers not for the consumer or those being served.

In a similar manner there are only two political parties.   Get mad at one – you have an alleged option and alternative as  a consumer or in this case citizen / voter / taxpayer.

However this time the fraud and deceit goes beyond anything imaginable.

Imagine this .  Your wallet is drained.   You fear for losing your job and home.  What of your family ?  Things should be tough.  Hold off.  Restraint of discretionary and luxury spending that can be held off till times improve and the tide turns .

And yet – what are Obama and his cronies doing ?
The Union leaders – in this case the AFL-CIO as an example – the self proclaimed “America’s Union Movement”,

are being wined and dined at the fantastic  Fontainebleau Resorts Miami Beach Resort.  Rooms start – that is start – at 400 $ US a night -  that is not ocean view – its a room facing a closet.  Wining and dining -  while the average America citizen wines in horror.    Sure hope that the organizers got a group discount corporate rate.

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It Takes Two to Tango in Management


2009
05.07

Its an interesting tale of  viewpoint and perspective

Some of the times it is not only management and upper management that should be blamed – workers and their leaders – in the case of the auto industry and specifically the American domestic auto industry that should be examined

Although it can well be said that upper managment in the American car industry was “clueless”  and “devoid of reality”  the case can well be made that for many years it was not the upper execs ( at the top floors dining on fine china in the executive dining rooms), were not making the decisions on auto productions – levels , standards and models .

The decision were being made either by politicans – with their demands and standards – be it safety , fuel or otherwise with the input of the unions chaneling upper management with all their demands – pay and benefits.

We all know of the $ 85 dollar an hour forklift operators, and all the benefits and costs that the automotive companies were saddled with.

If production slowed down workers were paid full bore almost not to work

You might think you were dealing with a government agency – a civil service organization

It was no wonder that “foreign “  autos even those made in the states cost less

Yet look at the qualifications of these union leaders – be it in the US or in Canada with the famous Buzz Hargrove.  What qualificiations do most of these individuals have other than they were good party ( nightime partying and drinking to either get the union appointments or to drink the auto execs under the table socially to have them agree to union requests / demands / blackmail)

Nothing is for nothing.  The costs that the car companies were saddled with had to come from somewhere. It was one giant game with the company “in bed with the union”  according to the viewpoint of the 85 $ dollar an hour fork lift drives.

What both forgot is who they were working for was the American consumer. The car that GM sold for x amount that was good value compared to the import that sold for X + 1000 dollars , should of had a sticker price relating to the actual price of the vehicle , or its constituent imported parts at the port of entry less tarrif fees , not those fees and taxes included.  Yet government was pieced off as well with increased levels of sales and import taxes collected.

Now that the unions will have a giant say as having substantial percentage of ownership of GM how are they going to blame upper management.  Its all in the viewpoint and the money you earn / take home / steal.

Original referenced viewpoint article: 

Outsourcing Top Management: The Lesson of Fiat-Chrysler
By: Dean Baker Monday May 4, 2009 8:20 pm  13
The media coverage of the auto bailouts has focused on the need for union autoworkers to take big pay cuts, causing them to once again miss the real story. The Fiat-Chrysler deal shows that the pay problem is at the top, not the bottom. At the end of the day, the new Chrysler is still likely to be producing most of its cars in the United States. What the new company will be getting from abroad is technology and top management.

This big story was so easily missed because it runs against one of the main myths that our elites have cultivated about the US economy: that the country has a “comparative advantage” in highly skilled labor. In this story, the United States will continue to lose manufacturing and other “less-skilled” jobs as its economy becomes more concentrated in highly skilled sectors.

This story was convenient for our elites because it meant that the decline of manufacturing was a necessary, if sometimes painful, part of a natural economic progression.

It also justified the growing inequality in US society that benefited not just Wall Street bankers and CEOs, but also millions of doctors, lawyers, economists, and other highly educated workers. These people took their six-figure salaries as a birthright, even as the pay of less educated workers stagnated or declined.

While this story of the US becoming a high skills center in the world economy may have been comforting to the elites, and was widely promoted by economists and the news media, there was never much truth to it. Highly skilled professionals did well in recent decades not because they succeeded in international competition, but rather because they were largely sheltered from it.

Trade agreements like NAFTA were explicitly designed to remove any barrier that made it difficult to export manufacturing goods to the United States, thereby placing US manufacturing workers directly in competition with their much lower paid counterparts in the developing world. Most of these restrictions had nothing to do with tariffs. Instead the key issues were rules protecting investment in the developing world along with limits on the ability of the US to exclude imports through safety or environmental regulations.

There has never been any similar effort to eliminate the barriers that prevent professionals from the developing world from coming to the United States and competing directly with their US counterparts as doctors or lawyers or in other highly paid professions.

The economists and the media somehow failed to notice that professionals were intentionally sheltered from international competition and instead just trumpeted them as the winners in the global economy. We were just treated to a beautiful example of this double standard when the media and the economists got all huffy about the “buy America” provision in the stimulus bill that might have protected a few manufacturing jobs in steel and other industries.

While this provision was roundly condemned and eventually watered down, the buy America provision in the Treasury’s latest bank bailout bill went completely unnoticed. This provision requires that any investment manager taking part in the program be headquartered in the United States. Even though the argument against protectionism in financial services is identical to the argument against protectionism in steel, no one bothered to make the argument when Wall Street was the beneficiary of protectionism.

The end result of this protectionism for those at the top is a bloated overpaid sector of top managers, which is what we saw at Chrysler. If we compare wages for assembly-line workers in Europe and the United States, there would not be much difference between the pay of UAW members and their counterparts in Europe. However, there would be a very large difference between the multi-million dollar pay packages of the top executives at the US companies and their European counterparts. The pay gaps persist among the more highly paid engineers and management personnel.

Therefore, it was only logical that a bailout of Chrysler would seek to take advantage of the lower cost management and design skills available at a European car company like Fiat. In Chrysler, as in other companies, the high pay packages for these people are like an anchor dragging them down in international competition. If the US is to be competitive in the 21st century, we must either bring the pay of those at the top back down to earth or we should look to follow the lead of Chrysler and contract out for these services.

 

 

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Abuses of Management – Examples in Today’s Press


2008
11.27

It does not take a genius to discover why the American and western financial systems are in such trouble. It all boils down to a number of very simple concepts.   Respect for others, hard work and morality.
Sadly most in “upper management” understand any of these simple concepts.   If you take a simple hamster as an example the simple animal exhibits, portrays and even intuitively understands three basic concepts
1) Always to be inquisitive and interested – always looking around for more and new sources of income flow so to speak in the form of nourishment
2) Never to bite the hand that feeds.  On top of that hamsters even seem to display a form of gratitude to those that provide for its living
3) If given or if the animal finds an amount of food – it will promptly hide the food away for storage for later use during non peak or off peak periods.  In essence this can be said to be “saving” or “investment” or simply planning ahead.
Contrast this to the recent display of American auto executives and their requests for funds from Congress.
First neither they, their workers nor union leaders seem to understand that they have been in a privilege position in terms of taking advantage of American auto consumers for years.  Brand loyalty, and a tariff system that protected against foreign imports were their shields of honor.
Yet as those came down and were eroded -  consumers bought “foreign cars” and developed brand loyalty to these lines – even growing through them as they prospered and advanced in life – much like the original General Motors model of starting with a Chevy and working up the various lines of GM products in their lives and their prosperity to an eventual aim of a Cadillac or worse a Buick model car the American auto executives in their wisdom decided in the 70’s that proudly “We do not want to build econoboxes” .   This was either for reasons of pride, ego or earning /profit per unit.  If forced to the wall G.M. (the market leader of its time with the most resources of any auto manufacturer by far) developed and built such forerunner quality products as the Chevy Vega, and at Ford – the Pinto.  As a result those young people entering the automotive market as a first time buyer purchased such vehicles as Damsons and Toyotas.  These people grew through life and most likely are now driving Toyota or Nissan products in the form of luxury Lexus or Infinity products.
Even after such an ordeal and teaching experience of life – you would think a humbling experience what do we have – Auto executives flying in corporate jets to demand money from congress. No preparation. No business plans what so ever.  Indeed the only result from the whole exercise seems to be a concern to shield the specific use of GM corporate jets.
One can say what else you can expect from a group of monkeys. Legends in their own minds. Putting in times in order to obtain perks and lord over their subordinates.

Nov. 27 (Bloomberg) — General Motors Corp., criticized by U.S. lawmakers for its use of corporate jets, asked aviation regulators to block the public’s ability to track a plane it uses.

“We availed ourselves of the option as others do to have the aircraft removed” from a Federal Aviation Administration tracking service, a GM spokesman, Greg Martin, said yesterday in an interview. He declined to discuss why GM made the request.

Flight data show that the leased Gulfstream Aerospace G-IV jet flew Nov. 18 from Detroit to Washington, where Chief Executive Officer Richard Wagoner Jr. spoke to a Senate committee that day and a House panel the next day on behalf of a $25 billion auto-industry rescue plan.

Representatives at the Nov. 19 House hearing including Democrat Gary Ackerman of New York faulted Wagoner, Ford Motor Co. CEO Alan Mulally and Chrysler LLC CEO Robert Nardelli for taking private jets to Washington to plead their case.

“Couldn’t you all have downgraded to first class?” Ackerman said.

Symbol for Critics

Critics of a federal aid package for GM, Ford and Chrysler spotlighted the exchange to attack the money-losing companies as undeserving of a bailout. GM, the biggest U.S. automaker, has said it may run out of operating cash by year’s end without government loans.

The Gulfstream jet was leased from GE Capital Solutions in Danbury, Connecticut, a unit of General Electric Co. After the plane’s latest flight to Washington on Nov. 25, and from there to Dallas, its movements could no longer be tracked.

An FAA spokeswoman, Laura Brown, said she couldn’t immediately determine whether her agency had granted GM’s flight-privacy request. “We do this routinely” for aircraft owners, she said yesterday. “They don’t have to have a reason” for requesting the block, she said.

The FAA tracking data don’t identify who is aboard the flights.

GM also has seven planes in its own fleet. All were grounded yesterday, said a spokesman, Tom Wilkinson. Two are for sale and two are in the process of being listed for sale, while Detroit-based GM plans to keep three, he said.

The leased Gulfstream has made 10 trips to Washington this year, including three since October, according to data compiled by Houston-based flight-tracking service FlightAware.com.

GM said it often sub-leases the airplane to other users. GM officials said company employees weren’t aboard the jet on the final Nov. 25 flights before its movements ceased being tracked.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=afrKemH3i.2Y&refer=home#

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