Reasons To Buy American OWNED!

Reasons To Buy AmArt Design By Al Canaleserican OWNED!

 

Reasons To Buy American OWNED! Updated periodically - - Please send your ideas and news articles that we can post here for all to view!  E-Mail to spoacdc1@aol.com

 

 

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Something To Think About Americans!

A physics teacher in high school, once told the students that while one grasshopper on the railroad tracks wouldn't slow a train very much, a billion of them would.  With that thought in mind, read the following ... obviously written by a good American.

(I think this lady's on the right track.  Let's all get behind her!)

        I was in Lowes the other day, and just for the heck of it I was looking at the hose attachments.  They were all made in China.  The next day I was in Ace Hardware, and just for the heck of it I checked the hose attachments there.  They were made in USA.  Got me thinking.  Start looking.

       In our current economic situation, every little thing we buy, or do, affects someone else - maybe even their job.  My grandson likes Hershey's candy.  I just noticed that it is marked "made in Mexico" now.  I choose not to buy it any more.

       My favorite toothpaste, Colgate, is also "made in Mexico" now.  I've switched to Crest.  You have to read the labels on everything.

       This past weekend I was at Kroger.  (Can be true for any store.)  I needed 60W light bulbs, and Bounce dryer sheets.  I was in the light bulb aisle, and right next to the GE brand I normally buy, was an off brand labeled, "Everyday Value."  I picked up both types of bulbs and compared the stats - they were the same, except for the price.  The GE bulbs were more money than the Everyday Value brand ... but the thing that surprised me the most, was the fact that GE was "made in MEXICO" and the "Everyday Value" brand was "made in (you got it) the USA", in a company in Cleveland, Ohio.

       So throw out the myth that you cannot find the products you use every day .... made right here!!!!!!!

       On I went to another aisle.  Those Bounce Dryer Sheets I needed - yep, you guessed it!  Bounce cost more money - and - it's made in Canada.  The Everyday Value brand was less money - and - "MADE IN THE USA"!  Bye-bye Bounce!  I did laundry yesterday, and the dryer sheets performed just like the Bounce Free I've been using for years ... and at almost half the price!

       My challenge to you is this.  Start reading the labels when you shop for everyday things, and see what you can find that is made in the USA.  The job you save may be your own, your granddaughters, or your sons, or your neighbors!

       If you accept the challenge,  please pass this on to others in your address book, so we can all start buying  A m e r i c a n  ... one light bulb at a time!

       Stop buying from overseas companies and other countries!

       We should have awakened a decade ago.  Longer than that, over 30 years ago it was already happening.

       Let's get with the program and help our fellow Americans keep their jobs, and create even more jobs, right here in the U. S. A.

Submitted By promine111

 

 

Jack,

 
As of late There has been a problem accessing your web site. once you sign in, it just goes blank. But that really is not why I am writing.
 
Was watching the news tonight and they announced the rise in jobless workers. The thought struck me" I wish we could take a survey of all the jobless people and find out what kind of automobile they last purchased." One could even go further and ask of the last 20 purchases you have made, how many were made in the USA.
 
Some people just don't seem to see the relationship.
 
Thanks for all you do.
 
Jon 

 

42 states lose jobs in August, up from 29 in July

42 states lose jobs in August, up from 29 in July; biggest cuts in Texas, Mich., Ga., Ohio

By Christopher S. Rugaber, AP Economics Writer

On Friday September 18, 2009

 

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Forty-two states lost jobs last month, up from 29 in July, with the biggest net payroll cuts coming in Texas, Michigan, Georgia and Ohio.

The Labor Department also reported Friday that 27 states saw their unemployment rates increase in August, and 14 states and Washington D.C., reported unemployment rates of 10 percent or above.

The report shows jobs remain scarce even as most analysts believe the economy is pulling out of the worst recession since the 1930s. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said earlier this week that the recovery isn't likely to be rapid enough to reduce unemployment for some time.

The jobless rate nationwide is expected to peak above 10 percent next year, from its current 9.7 percent.

"You are seeing the pace of job losses slow a little bit," said Mike Lynch, a regional economist at IHS Global Insight. But states "are not out of the woods yet."

The United States lost 216,000 jobs in August, the department said earlier this month, down from 276,000 in July. Employers have eliminated 6.9 million jobs since the recession began in December 2007.

Texas lost 62,200 jobs as its unemployment rate rose to 8 percent in August for the first time in 22 years. The state's leisure, construction and manufacturing industries were hardest hit, losing 35,500 jobs.

Michigan saw 42,900 jobs disappear, including 25,000 in manufacturing, as the state continued to suffer along with its struggling auto industry.

Michigan's unemployment rate rose to 15.2 percent, the highest in the nation. When its jobless rate topped 15 percent in June it was the first time any state surpassed that mark since 1984.

Most economists project Michigan's jobless rate will continue to rise. The University of Michigan estimates it will average 15.8 percent in 2010.

Nevada has the second-highest rate at 13.2 percent, followed by Rhode Island at 12.8 percent and California and Oregon at 12.2 percent each.

The jobless rates in California, Nevada and Rhode Island were the highest on records dating to 1976. California and Nevada have been slammed by the housing bust, while Rhode Island has lost thousands of manufacturing and government jobs in the past year.

Still, California's net loss of 12,000 jobs was down from 35,000 the previous month. From November 2008 through June, the state lost at least 65,000 jobs each month, said Jerry Nickelsburg, a senior economist with the Anderson Forecast at the University of California, Los Angeles.

Georgia and Ohio reported the third and fourth-highest job losses, respectively, but their unemployment rates both fell as many of the unemployed dropped out of the work force. Once unemployed people stop looking for work -- some, for example, may return to school -- they are no longer included in the jobless rate.

The four states with the largest drops in their unemployment rates -- Indiana, Colorado, Kansas and Virginia -- experienced similar trends: thousands of jobless workers gave up on their searches and left the work force. None of those states actually added any jobs, according to a survey of employers.

Colorado state officials, however, noted that a separate survey of households found the number of residents who said they have jobs increased by 4,900 to 2.49 million.

"This improvement is encouraging news," said Donald Mares, executive director of Colorado's Department of Labor and Employment. While "some ups and downs" are likely over the next several months, "employment appears to be stabilizing," he said.

Still, only eight states added jobs in August on a seasonally adjusted basis, according to employer surveys used by the U.S. Labor Department. North Carolina added the most, with a gain of 7,000, followed by Montana with 5,100 and West Virginia with 2,800.

The biggest gains in North Carolina and Montana were in government jobs, while West Virginia saw the most improvement in education and health services.

New Jersey added 800 jobs, but its jobless rate jumped to 9.7 percent, the highest in 33 years, from 9.3 percent. The gains there were in transportation and utilities, as well as professional and business services, chiefly because of the hiring of temporary service workers.

"When you see temp firm hirings going up, that's certainly a positive sign," New Jersey Labor Commissioner David J. Socolow said. Companies usually hire temporary workers before they add permanent ones.

North Dakota reported the lowest unemployment rate in August, at 4.3 percent, followed by South Dakota with 4.9 percent and Nebraska at 5 percent.

North Dakota has benefited from a healthy oil sector, and all three states are helped by relatively strong agriculture economies.

Associated Press Writers Beth DeFalco in Trenton, N.J., and Juliet Williams in Sacramento, Calif., contributed to this report.

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/42-states-lose-jobs-in-August-apf-1171568305.html?x=0

Submitted By R. King

 

BUY AMERICAN PRODUCTS FROM AMERICAN OWNED COMPANIES

I can verify this because I was in Lowes the other day looking at the
hose attachments.  They were all made in China . The next day I was
in Ace Hardware and decided to check the hose attachments there.
They were made in USA .  Start Looking!

In our current economic situation, every little thing we buy or do affects
someone  job or even our own!  We ARE in an Economic WAR!!!

BUY AMERICAN PRODUCTS----

if you want unemployment to stay down in the USA ?

My grandson likes Hershey's candy. I noticed it is marked made in Mexico, now I do not buy it any more.
My favorite toothpaste Colgate is made in Mexico now. I have switched to Crest.

You have to read the labels on everything.

This past weekend I was at Kroger. I needed 60 W light bulbs and Bounce Dryer
sheets. I was in the light bulb aisle, and right next to the GE brand I normally buy was an off brand labeled,
"Everyday Value." I picked up both types of bulbs and compared the Stats -
they were the same except for the price. The GE bulbs were more money
than the Everyday Value brand but the thing that surprised me the most was
the fact that GE was made in MEXICO and the Everyday Value brand was made in the USA in a Company in Cleveland, Ohio.

So throw out the myth that you cannot find products you use every day that are made right here in the USA!!!!.

So on to another aisle - Bounce Dryer sheets....yep, you guessed it, Bounce cost
more money and is made in Canada .

The Everyday Value brand was less money and MADE IN THE USA! I did laundry
yesterday and the dryer sheets performed just like the Bounce Free I have been
using for years and at almost half the price!

So my challenge to you is to start reading the labels when you shop for
everyday things and see what you can find that is made in the USA - the job you save
may be your own or your neighbors!

If you accept the challenge, pass this on to others in your address  book so
we can all start buying American, one light bulb at a time! Stop buying from
overseas Companies! 

Let's get with the program..... Help our fellow Americans keep their jobs
and create more jobs here in the U.S.!

Submitted By G. Williamson

 

Saving American Manufacturing

By Roger Simmermaker

When the average American thinks about manufacturing, and it seems most rarely do, they tend to think about it as “dying.” There is little doubt that in today’s increasingly global economy that American manufacturing needs to be saved. In the new book Can American Manufacturing Be Saved: Why We Should And How We Can, author Michele Nash-Hoff highlights the current state of manufacturing in this country and what we can do to promote more of it and save it as well.

Nash-Hoff, drawing on her experience of 25 years as a manufacturer’s sales rep, details how manufacturing developed in America through the labor movement and industrial revolution, analyzes the impact and future of outsourcing and our nation’s trade policies, looks at the organizations that are trying to help save manufacturing, what they are doing, and how we can help.

The author makes a strong case about the importance of avoiding Chinese products, especially food. For example, lax pollution controls in one Chinese city (Xiditou) with several chemical factories have caused the rate of cancer to be 18 times the national average as toxins like sulfur dioxide are dumped into a nearby river.

Nash-Hoff also points out that while our trade deficit with China is near an all time high, we continue to create competition for our own manufacturers through assisting China in cleaning up their environmental mess with our tax dollars. She also claims it would not be an exaggeration to say that American consumers have paid for the bulk of China’s military buildup.

She rightly contends that if we don’t help save American manufacturing jobs, which pay much higher wages than service industry jobs, our tax base will erode, our infrastructure will weaken, and our nation’s standard of living will decline. Why? Because manufacturing corporations pay 30 to 34 percent of all corporate tax payments, and workers who make higher wages pay more taxes to our national treasury. Offshore tax haven locations like Bermuda cost the U.S. government another $10 billion in lost tax revenue each year.

A 2008 report by the National Association of Manufacturers stated that regulation costs like health care, pensions, corporate taxes and tort litigation add over 30 percent to the costs of American manufacturer’s costs, making maintaining a U.S. base for production more difficult.

Maintaining that offshore outsourcing will continue in the future, the author interestingly claims that the purely financial benefits of lower cost will erode over time. Transportation costs for shipping from overseas are rising. Other expenses like the appreciation of the Chinese yuan, travel to visit offshore vendors and communications also represent additional costs that are eating up foreign labor-cost savings.

In 2007, 60 percent Exxel’s sleeping bags were made in Shanghai, but by 2010, 90 percent will be made in their Haleyville, Alabama factory. As wages in urban China jumped 18 percent in the first half of 2008 compared to a year earlier, overall costs in Haleyville actually run three percent cheaper than in China, and Exxel can deliver an American made sleeping bag in three days. Shipping a Chinese-made sleeping bag, however, can take up to two months.

But still there are circumstances and factors beyond the control of an American manufacturer. For example, Harley-Davidson plans to lay off over one-thousand American workers due to sinking demand. If China was to allow Harley-Davidson to import their motorcycles, these American jobs would likely be saved. The problem? Lack of trade reciprocity means China imposes a 30 percent tariff on foreign vehicles.

Author Michele Nash-Hoff makes a convincing argument that unless we change our trade policy, we will not be able to save American manufacturing. She also supports a “Buy American” policy and recommends we should prevent the sale of strategic U.S.-owned companies to foreign companies and enact legislation to prevent corporations from avoiding the U.S. income tax by reincorporating in a foreign country. The author also says that if 200 million Americans refused to buy just $20.00 each of Chinese goods, that’s a four billion dollar trade imbalance resolved in our favor.

She says now is the time for trade organizations and professional societies to stop undercutting each other on issues that only benefit their members and instead work together to save American manufacturing.

I highly recommend Can American Manufacturing Be Saved: Why We Should And How We Can to every American who is concerned about the future of our great country. Even if you haven’t particularly paid attention to the importance of American manufacturing to our future well-being as a nation, you’ll realize its importance after reading this book. And if you have regarded American manufacturing as an important part of our survival as a nation, you’ll likely come away with the opinion it is even more important than you once thought after reading this book. You can learn more about the book, including how to order, at http://www.savingusmanufacturing.com/.

It takes considerable wealth to be able to protect freedom. The challenge for America, the author contends, is to keep as many companies as possible growing and prospering within the United States. I couldn’t agree more.

***************************************************************************

Roger Simmermaker is the author of How Americans Can Buy American: The Power of Consumer Patriotism and writes "Buy American Mention of the Week" articles for WorldNetDaily.com and his website www.howtobuyamerican.com. Roger is the vice president of his local Machinists Union, has been a frequent guest on Fox News, CNN, and MSNBC, and has been quoted in the USA Today, Wall Street Journal and Business Week among many other publications.

 

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At Witz’ End: What’s an American Car?

Where it’s assembled is irrelevant.

by Gary Witzenburg      (2007-02-27)

So what is an "American" car?

 

If it is simply one built in America, as most foreign makers and U.S. media would have you believe, then vehicles built in Canada are Canadian, those assembled in Mexico are Mexican and Porsches built in Finland are Finnish.

 

But we know intuitively that's not the case. And yet in this global age of autos, some people insist on sticking to the idea of purely "American," or "German," or "Japanese" cars - when in many cases, today's vehicles are polyglots, products of the same global industry.

 

But that doesn't change the political nature of the question.

 

Say General Motors decides to build Chevrolets in Japan . If the cars are competitive (could happen), that might make sense to escape expensive barriers the Japanese government puts in the way of imported vehicles to protect its own automakers.

 

So GM buys some land outside Nagoya , builds a plant and hires some local workers and managers to run it. Say it builds a GM Powertrain plant next door, hires more locals and - since it would be cheaper to source parts and components locally than import them - sources most of them with Japanese suppliers. Say it starts cranking out enough appealing and carefully assembled cars to put a meaningful dent in the Japanese market.

 

This would be good for the local economy in and around Nagoya. However, assuming that the Japanese new-car market was not growing, it would displace sales of cars built by weaker Japanese makers and hurt employment elsewhere in Japan. And as those companies' sales and shares declined, the jobs displaced would not be limited to factories; a lot of better, higher-paying headquarters jobs would be lost as well, most of them in and around Tokyo.

 

Would the Japanese people and media see this displacement, and net loss, as okay because "home-built Chevrolets are as Japanese as anything from our own makers"? Would they see profits from increasingly popular Japan-built Chevy's going back eastward across the Pacific as okay for their own (currently struggling) economy? What do you think?

 

Protection or barrier?

 

Let's carry this scenario a few steps further: Say GM's success with its first Japanese plant and its growing penetration of the Japanese market leads it to build more plants there. Say Ford and Chrysler Group follow, and their American suppliers are encouraged to build parts plants there to support them…and to win business away from Japanese suppliers.

 

Japan 's highly protective government, of course, would never allow any of this to happen. And even if it did, few highly nationalistic Japanese would buy American-brand vehicles at the expense of their own coveted makers regardless of where they were built.

 

But say, just for a moment, that they would. Would those Japan-built cars and trucks - most designed and developed in North America -- qualify as "Japanese?" Would those parts built in American-owned Japanese plants be considered "Japanese?" Would the assembly and sales of those vehicles in Japan be perceived as good for Japanese jobs and the Japanese economy? Could their U.S. makers get away with advertising them as such? Would the Japanese media endorse and recommend them as such? What do you think?

 

So why has exactly this scenario evolved in the U.S.A., where nearly every Japanese automaker and some Europeans and Koreans assemble cars and trucks for the American market and beyond? Because, once import vehicle makers began achieving serious penetration of this market during the fuel-crisis 1970s, our government essentially forced them into it by imposing quotas on imported vehicles. Because our domestic makers during the 1980s and '90s were not especially worthy of protection. Because enlightened off-shore makers saw huge PR and some business benefits in building vehicles here despite our much higher business costs. And because our governments (federal and especially state and local) and most media encouraged, enabled and welcomed them here as job "creators."

 

Job creation - or job death

 

What they did not see, or chose to ignore, is that "creation" of a few thousand plant jobs here and there would eventually destroy many more and better jobs elsewhere. So while some (mostly southern) states continue to battle each other with big incentives to attract new foreign-maker plants to gain two or three thousand jobs, other (mostly northern) states lose tens of thousands. While import companies will "create" about 3000 U.S. jobs in 2007, raising their total to 106,000, U.S. automakers will lose nearly 43,000 this year, falling to about 378,000, according to Jim Doyle, president of the Washington, DC-based Level Field Institute, which tracks and reports auto-company U.S. employment.

 

Doyle further predicts that U.S. industry-job losses will total some 95,000 (from 2005 employment) by 2010, and even then the three U.S.-based companies will employ 71 percent of all American auto workers - four times more per car sold than Hyundai, 2.5 times more than Toyota, and nearly twice as many as Honda. "Reporters tend to focus on plant jobs and miss the headquarters jobs," Doyle asserts.

 

"Foreign automakers spend millions around the country promoting their new plants and U.S. investment," he says. "We welcome their investment, but Americans should know that each Ford, GM, or Chrysler Group purchase supports nearly 2.5 times the number of U.S. jobs of foreign automakers, on average."

 

What's more American?

 

Some say a Japanese car bolted together in America with a fair amount of U.S. content is more "American" than a U.S.-brand car assembled in Canada or Mexico with some foreign-sourced parts. Nonsense! Ask yourself, again, where are the bulk of the better jobs and where do the profits go? DaimlerChrysler's Chrysler Group, by the way, still qualifies as "American" because it is an entire self-contained car company based in America and employing tens of thousands of Americans at all levels that happens to be owned by a German company, just as Opel is a self-contained German company owned by General Motors.

 

"Toyota spends huge sums of money promoting the idea that they 'support' 368,000 U.S. jobs," Doyle says, "but those include supplier, dealership and other peripheral jobs. Using the same multiplier, GM supports 1.9 million U.S. jobs and Ford 1.2 million. Toyota also says it builds here most of the vehicles it sells here. That may be its eventual intent, but Automotive News reported that 48 percent of the vehicles Toyota sold here in 2006 were imported.

 

"Is it more important to the U.S. economy for someone to buy a Ford Fusion, although it's built in Mexico, from a company that employs 105,000 Americans," Doyle asks, "than a Honda built in Ohio from a company that employs 27,000? Domestic makers also purchase nearly 80 percent of the parts made here, and domestic vehicles average 76 percent U.S. content vs. 48 percent for U.S.-built imports. That represents billions of dollars in spending."

 

No, an "American" car or truck is one built by a U.S.-based company that supports primarily U.S. jobs and the U.S. economy, regardless of its parts content and especially its point of assembly.

 

And should Americans buy "American" out of patriotism. No, but they should carefully consider U.S.-brand vehicles - now that most are competitive or better in design, engineering, quality, and fuel economy - out of their own economic self-interest. Because whatever business they are in, every time "Detroit" and its struggling U.S. auto suppliers shed another 10,000, or 20,000, or 30,000 American workers, that multiplies to hundreds of thousands who can no longer afford whatever goods or services their own employers sell.

 

Think about it.

http://www.thecarconnection.com/pf/Auto_News/Commentary/At_Witz_End_Whats_an_American_Car.S192.A11981.html

http://www.thecarconnection.com/?article=11981

Submitted By B.B.

 

 

Originally Published in The Lakeshore Guardian

Another Senior Moment - May 17, 2007
By Jim Sponseller

Most of the time, this column takes on a light-hearted attitude. Today, it's
a heavy-hearted one.
It’s heavy-hearted because I’m both disappointed and worried about the way
that so many car buyers are ignoring the products of America’s automobile
manufacturers. Yes, I know all the arguments pro and con. The reasoning for
buying from foreign manufacturers abound in letters to the editors and
columns by auto writers in our newspapers and magazines.

Up front, I should admit that I worked for two U.S. auto manufacturers in
addition to several decades in the newspaper trade. The first was
Kaiser-Frazier, back in 1953. I had worked there only six months when they
locked the doors of the huge plant in Ypsilanti because of the lack of
sales. I later had a stint with General Motors that lasted longer. I
personally believe that most of the models produced by American carmakers
are just as good as those offered by foreign companies. Many are even
better.

But besides the fact that I have been completely satisfied with the cars
produced by American-based companies, one of my main reasons for never
considering the purchase of a foreign vehicle is quite different than anyone
else you may know. Some may even call it stupid and antiquated reasoning.
Here it is:

Not until I went to work for the Fisher Body Division of GM did I realize
what an impact our auto companies had in the defense of our country. I had
heard of Detroit being called the “Arsenal of Democracy” but really didn’t
appreciate the meaning of it until I thumbed through the historical files of
Fisher Body. One of my many jobs was to keep them up to date. Fisher Body
was the division that produced the bodies for nearly every GM model since
they started in 1908 until the division was merged into other units in 1984.

While the “Arsenal of Democracy” tag wasn’t applied until World War II,
Fisher Body’s involvement started during the first World War. Soon after the
U.S. entered the war in 1917, the Army granted a contract to Fisher Body for
the largest order every written in this country for airplanes. Although
Fisher Body had never before made a single airplane, it produced the first
one 48 days after taking over a government-owned building near downtown
Detroit (later used to assemble Cadillac car bodies.) It eventually reached
40 a day. By the time the rather short war for the U.S. ended, the plant had
assembled 2,005 planes.

Within months after Pearl Harbor, Detroit’s auto industry shut down its
assembly lines and converted to the tools of war. Ford Motor was soon
turning out such items as aircraft and tank engines and gun mounts. It was
most famous for its vast Willow Run plant where 8,685 B-24 bombers were
produced. Chrysler converted its assembly lines to tanks, Army trucks,
anti-aircraft guns and assemblies for B-25 medium bombers. Detroit's Hudson
plant made sub-assemblies for the B-29 bomber and marine engines. Packard
produced engines for fighter planes and PT boats. The hundreds of automotive
supplier plants all became involved.

I don’t have a record of the items produced by the score of other General
Motors divisions but I discovered that its Fisher Body Division alone
contributed a remarkable assortment of material to the war effort. Twelve
Fisher plants were assigned for use by other GM divisions and other
companies such as Boeing and Firestone. The remaining 13 plants, mostly in
Michigan, tallied up production numbers such as these:

§         Aircraft assemblies, such as wings and tail sections, were
produced for 5,214 Mitchell B-25 bombers.
§         In Grand Blanc, 17,213 tanks rolled off the assembly line, most of
them the famous General Sherman.
§         Over in the Grand Rapids plant, the assembly line produced 2,359
anti-aircraft guns and later 550 huge 5-inch guns for the Navy's ships. They
also shipped out over a half million high-explosive 155mm shell casings,
plus aircraft and tank components.
§         In plants of the Ternstedt Division of Fisher Body, a total of
293,100 intricate gyro aircraft instruments were manufactured. The division
also produced 1.2 million parts used in fighter plane cannons.
§         Five Fisher east coast plants were merged into the GM Eastern
Aircraft Division and was the source of three-quarters of the nearly 18,000
Wildcat and Avenger planes produced for the Navy carriers.
§         In Cleveland, a 400 acre plant was built for assembly of wings,
tail sections, ailerons, flaps, tail gun turrets and other parts for the
huge B-29 bombers as well as parts for tanks and Naval guns.
§         Also pouring out of these facilities, along with plants in Flint,
Lansing, Detroit and Pontiac, were such items as 200,000 rocket fins, 86,000
droppable fuel tanks, 1,500 cowlings for Navy fighters and 9,352 huge
crankcases for diesel engines to power Navy ships and submarines.

Today, dozens of auto plants are closing. So are hundreds of automotive
supplier plants. One can only wonder how we could ever gear up to fill
wartime production should the need ever arise. Call up Japan, Germany or
China?

All of this wartime production stuff may sound boring and trivial to most
Americans now, but back in the 1940's it was a life and death matter for our
troops and for the defense of our country. Back then, when I was among the
millions of GI's serving overseas, I had no idea of how vital the efforts
were of our auto plants and the men and women working there in achieving
final victory. Today I do.

You can call me a sentimental old geezer still living in the past, but I'll
just keep on buying and loving the cars that best support our country's
economy today and played a huge role in keeping it free over 60 years ago.

Oh yes, I almost forgot. During those war years, 14,761 Fisher body
employees left their jobs and families to serve in the armed forces. And 288
gave their lives.

Submitted by: bop41@cox.net

 

April 10, 2007 1:19 PM ET

Japan Car Makers Bring Work Home (Toyota, Nissan and Honda making more vehicles in Japan)

TOKYO (AP) - At a time when Detroit's "Big Three" are closing plants and slashing jobs to revive their ailing business, their Japanese counterparts are busy opening plants in Japan for the first time in decades.

That's because there's strong demand for fuel-efficient small cars such as the Toyota Yaris and Honda Fit -- all of which are made in Japan -- as well as luxury models and hybrids, most of which are made here.

But there's also a shift away from the conventional wisdom that automakers are best off making cars in the same region where they sell.

Toyota, Nissan and Honda realize that the roots of their success lie in the management and production strategies developed and honed at home -- from outstanding quality control to their extensive supplier networks -- and that expanding in Japan may be the smartest way to meet demand for certain types of vehicles.

"It doesn't make sense to produce everything abroad," said Tsuyoshi Mochimaru, auto analyst with Deutsche Securities in Tokyo. "The idea is that rethinking quality begins in Japan."

Among the recent boosts in production here:

_ Honda Motor Co. is planning its first plant opening in Japan in 30 years. The new car-assembly and engine plants will be running by 2010, creating 2,200 jobs in Japan.

_ Toyota Motor Corp. is adding a new line at a plant in southwestern Japan to double production of engines for luxury models. The engine plant, which opened in 2005, marked Toyota's first plant opening in Japan in about 20 years; the new line, starting in 2008, will add 500 jobs in Japan.

_ Nissan Motor Co. completed a second engine facility last year (in Japan) to make engines for luxury cars and other models. It's expanding another engine plant in Yokohama, southwest of Tokyo.

Thierry Viadieu, a Nissan executive who has overseen alliances, said the plant openings in Japan mark a new stage of growth from earlier decades when the main goal was simpler: Get out of Japan to produce cars where they're being sold.

These days, he said, multinational manufacturers need to be sophisticated in their production strategies, coordinating output among their far-flung plants, amid increasingly intense competition.

Nissan, for example, imports all of its Infiniti luxury models sold in North America from Japan -- and for now, that makes sense, said Nissan Chief Operating Officer Toshiyuki Shiga.

"We don't start out with the idea that we need plants in Japan," Shiga said. "Each plant taking up the challenge leads to Nissan's overall competitiveness."

Kazuo Aoki, general manager at the Union of Japanese Scientists and Engineers, an organization that promotes technology, said the fundamentals of ensuring quality are based in Japan, which boasts top-notch parts suppliers and steelmakers.

"It's still best to produce domestically those cars with extra value," Aoki said. "But what you want to avoid is friction with nations, where the cars get exported."

In the 1980s and 1990s, Japanese automakers busily set up plants abroad, including North America, to cut costs and blunt the "Japan-bashing" among some Americans who blamed them for the loss of U.S. jobs.

Some U.S. legislators have revived complaints about Japan's success at the expense of American manufacturers. United States Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., who represents thousands of Detroit-based auto workers, has said that the Japanese have an unfair edge from a weak yen, which makes it easier to underprice American rivals.

Such complaints have struck a sensitive nerve for some Americans worried about the fates of U.S. auto companies, which are slashing jobs and shuttering plants.

General Motors Corp. lost $10.4 billion in 2005 but underwent massive restructuring and trimmed its losses to $2 billion in 2006. Ford Motor Co. lost $12.7 billion last year, while DaimlerChrysler has decided to put up money-losing Chrysler for sale.

Toyota is steadily encroaching on their home turf. Autodata Corp.'s figures for March gave Toyota a 16 percent of the U.S. market, behind GM, with 22 percent, and Ford, with 17 percent.

Toyota is now exporting nearly half the vehicles it sells from Japan. Last year, that percentage was 46 percent, up from about 38 percent in 2005 because of a surge in U.S. demand and the inability of U.S. factories to keep up with demand.

One of Toyota's hot cars, the Prius hybrid, which switches between a gasoline engine and an electric motor to deliver as much as 60 miles per gallon, is made only in Japan.

Analysts say the recent production boom in Japan is also a reflection of how Japanese automakers have dispersed production -- small cars and high-end models in Japan, pickup trucks in Thailand, and bigger trucks in the U.S. -- so strong local demand, labor costs, tax laws and other factors make that place the best choice.

The Japanese have much at stake in maintaining the legacy of quality production methods and management philosophies in Japan, said Anand Sharma, manufacturing expert and co-founder of TBM Consulting Group.

"They have to keep that spirit alive, and they have to have some of that production there so that spirit doesn't fade away," Sharma said.

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