houndawg wrote:lifesapuntreturn wrote:
Management is a symptom, not the root, of the problem. Their biggest mistake has been agreeing to these give away union contracts all these years.
The unions now trying to blame "management" for the problem isn't going to fly anywhere outside of union halls. All you have to do is look at the non-union auto manufacturers in the south, who are profitable and have been for years, to understand what's caused this problem.
Not so. The fact that unions exist at all is a result of poor management. Fire the executive suite en masse, and half of the salaried workforce. Cut the overhead to the bone before you start cutting direct labor.
Don't disagree with you about managment Dawg - smart leaders realized a long time ago that hard/smart workers were an essential asset to their business and took care of them accordingly.
When people complain about the cost of union labor at the auto manufacturers, they're not just complaining about the costs due to the wage rates and number of workers. There are other factors that need to be addressed for the Big 3 to compete:
- Work rules that force the manufacturers to hire more people but impede efficiency
- Defined benefit pension plans (while the majority of the country has defined contribution plans)
- Health care plans with 100% coverage and low deductibles (while the rest of the country is moving toward employees sharing some of the cost of their coverage)
You might think that these "benefits" are fine & dandy and from a employees perspective they are but they make it very difficult for the manfacturers to compete and what good are the benefits if the employer is unable to honor their obligation.
You might also think that it's management's fault for signing the darn contracts and you would be 50% right. Management's options during contract negotiations likely were to either negotiate the best they could but accept the union terms in order to keep their business operating or to take a strike and try risk of losing market share immediately. So they wimped out and took the easy road, leaving the eventual loss of market share for someone else to worry about. Union leadership deserves just as much of the blame. Just as many in corporate management lacked vision & leadership in focusing on short-term stock market results, many union leaders ignored the long-term impact of their contract demands and gotten as much as they could at that time, not worrying about how the piper would be paid when the debt came due.
For the union/management relationship to work in the auto industry, they need to work together to help the company compete. This will likely require significantly greater cuts and concessions than have already been made.