The government can pass laws with very stiff penalties for not abiding by them.
Do you honestly think that any bailout bill is going to feature even the slightest penalty? This package is going to be complete with incentives, but no repercussions; after all, we come from a country where punishing businesses for engaging in corrupt or even questionable activities is considered unpatriotic (or socialist, depending on which blog you read).
That's how it always has been. When the Clean Air Act was updated in 1990, Congress steered away from applying harsh standards to corporations which emitted excessive amounts of CO2, and instead included "cap and trade" programs which would benefit those corporations financially instead. Twenty years later, CO2 pollution is still a huge problem, yet businesses are too afraid that they will lose the financial crutches they've been leaning on-- thanks to the government.
This bailout will not feature any sort of repercussions for environmentally degrading or financially unstable business practices like Barack Obama apparently wants. It will be filled to the brim with financial benefits for the fat cats running the show, and won't feature a single line which punishes the automobile manufacturers for their failures.
I have faith in that one, because the fundraising efforts of nearly one third of the members of Congress depends on it.
That would actually be their whole reason for merging. Kind of like how banks are buying other banks right now.
But the Japanese manufacturers don't have a real reason to buy up their competitors, considering most Japanese car companies are successful domestically and abroad. Few competitors are going to want to consolidate anyway.
I was thinking about that when I wrote the other post. I wasn't sure if they had simmiliar laws or not, although I figured they probably did. However that is not necessarily a gurantee it wont happen. I'm sure courruption is just as rampant in Japan as it is here.
Actually, I believe Japan ranks in the top 10 for "least corrupt governments" according to a recent study... The United States was somewhere in the twenties...
And you notice here in America that despite our monopoly laws, you only have one option to buy your electricity from, unless your wealthy enough to buy solar panels. I got we energies and nobody else to choose from.
You have a good counter argument however we can't just sit by and let all these corporations go bankrupt, or were all gonna be screwed. We might end up being screwed anyways, but at least their is a chance we wont be. Plus six million lost jobs? Too dangerous and too unacceptable.
I beg to differ. What is too dangerous and unacceptable is for U.S. car companies to expect us to bail them out with more magic money we don't have, despite the fact that they have had YEARS to change their business practices in order to compete with foreign manufacturers. They have had designs on the table they were too hesitant to produce, because they felt the gas guzzlers they had been promoting would make more money in the long run. They didn't foresee an oil crisis (because most of these companies work hand in hand with the oil companies, so I'm sure a rosy picture was painted for them), they didn't foresee the green movement (which is strange considering it began to blossom again four years ago), and they didn't hire new talent which was aware of the changing business environment these companies were facing.
No amount of money will be able to solve the true problems these companies face: A lack of innovation, and a lack of incentive for Americans to purchase vehicles domestically. I feel sorry for the people who will lose their jobs, I truly do... but it is better for them to face the reality of the situation now, than to get their hopes up only for them to lose their jobs anyway within the next year or so...