Some Fords use Mazda transmissions, like my old Explorer. The Ford was assembled in Mexico, maybe should have been called Fexican.
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Ill take a crack at this referencing a gentler time of the 70's
at the time ... total materials bill was all of $500 in any given vehicle .... it sold at the lot for around 7000
thats a multiple of 14 times materials, or 6.5 kilobucks gross profit. Of this, about 500 was likely gathered by the dealer leaving 6 kilobucks ... of that figure 10% or 600 bucks per unit was labor and operating cost.
now we are down to 5400 ... this goes to the company ..... wherever its headquarters may be ... foreign or domestic.
thats quite a chunk of payolah going ... somewhere
this article does not take into account the reality of drive by wire in the face of a highly probable computer lockup (floor mat my eye)
the shift linkage is whole or in part replaced by a wiring harness. if this is a system failure ... shift to neutral will mean nothing cause it does nothing.
Ignition also answers to the computer. go ahead .. try it, if its a programming error in effect ... it too means nothing.
it is very similar to a hung PC .. ctrl+alt+delete fails ... thats it, no input gets through
with respect, I think that statement is flawed by some manufacturers.
I have personally been thru the Honda plants in Ohio. They cast and machine the engines and parts, stamp body parts, paint, assemble, ship, all from right there.
So explain to me how lots and lots of money goes back to Japan.
Please be specific.
You apparently did not read the article. Once again, BRAKES WILL STOP THE CAR.
Be safe.
When it comes to the "cost of manufacture" of a piece of inventory (in this case an automobile) it has nothing to do with the "dealer cost" or invoice. Typically the dealer invoice is more than double what it actually costs in parts, labor and production facility expenses to produce that vehicle.
In the incident involving the Prius yesterday, the repot I heard stated that the driver put the car into neutral and it still accelerated. I have never driven a Prius, but don't they have a transmission similar to a conventional car? I call BS!
I suppose that maybe newer automatic transmissions are made to not shift at high speeds (as it would completely wreck the transmission to go from D to R or P).
I would respectfully like to call BS on that idea. If you could assemble a car for $10,000, and your competition was selling it for $20,000, any businessman knows that you simply ramp up production and start selling them for $15,000. You're only making half the money on each vehicle, but you're selling three times as many. It's simple economics, and competition won't allow for such large profit margins on an item that expensive.
m1gunner, if that is true, then why can't Chrysler and GM turn a profit?
When it comes to the "cost of manufacture" of a piece of inventory (in this case an automobile) it has nothing to do with the "dealer cost" or invoice. Typically the dealer invoice is more than double what it actually costs in parts, labor and production facility expenses to produce that vehicle.
To keep the numbers easier to deal with, I will use 40% as an example (many vehicles' production costs are far less than this number).
It is generally agreed amoung US economists (both liberal and conservative) that money spent in the economy has an effect far greater than the actual dollar amount. What happens is the money gets re-spent a number of times till it is worn away by consumers' marginal propensity to save (they won't spend every cent they receive, they will save some). Money spent in the consumer market (as opposed to government spending) is normallyy respent 9 times (for this type of purchase the miltiplier effect is 9).
Take the Toyota that is built in Mudbank Mississippi. It is shipped to a dealer, and that dealer pays Toyota 20,000 bucks for it, the sticker has a MSRP of 23,500. The economy really stinks, so the dealer sells it at "cost" which is what he paid (20,000 bucks).
$12,000 of the money you gave the dealer is sent to Japan, it is forever removed from the US economy. The other $8,000 goes to Mudbank Miss, and gets distributed to the various employees, suppliers and contractors that supplied goods and services necessary to build that car (assuming all the parts were sourced in the US - not very likely)
So, your 20,000 dollars you initially spent had a potential economic stimulus of $180,000 to the US economy ended up only providing, at most, $72,000 worth of stimulus.
The situation reverses somewhat when a US manufacturer outsources his manufacturing. The example of the Ford made in Canada (or Mexico, or any other country). If production costs are significantly less for Ford to offshore their car production, their corporate profit is greater per unit than if that product were made in Detroit. This offsets to a degree the stimulus lost by paying foreign workers to build the cars. If sub-assemblies are US made, then the loss is less.
The Car company still earns their profit, but there is a big difference where that profit goes, and whose economy benifits from that profit.
Yes, this is a gross oversimplification, but the basic mechanics of the process is correct.
edit to add: sorry about using the "stimulus" word, it seems popular these days. "economic activity" can be substituted if you wish.
Forgive me for not being able to keep up but I’m lost here.
Are you saying it is better for the US to have Ford build cars in Mexico, than Toyota to build cars in Texas?
If so I want to be a Ford executive, must be a lot of them to spread all that money around to.
How do you get that job and how many of those jobs are there compared to the factory workers in Texas & Ohio?
m1gunner, I'm still not buying the idea that half the price of a new car is profit. Even if you add in GM's legacy costs (pensions and health care for retirees), which are under $3k/ car, they should still be making a profit.
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