BlackLantern
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well the CEOs are in front of Congress again today....it's intriguing to watch grown men in 3-piece suits beg for money
So its like $72.26/hr in actual overhead.According to a GM, "Base wages average about $28 an hour. The average reaches $39.68 an hour, including base pay, cost-of-living adjustments, night-shift premiums, overtime, holiday and vacation pay. Health-care, pension and other benefits average another $33.58 an hour
and that number is for the big 3....other automakers like Toyota or Saturn are at about $42-44 an hour
Saturn is a subsidiary of GM...
well the CEOs are in front of Congress again today....it's intriguing to watch grown men in 3-piece suits beg for money
Sorry....everyone is just throwing auto maker names around....I do know, I'm not sure which Senator had the numbers, but was making the point that the big 3's labor costs are well above that of any other automakers that have facilities in the US
20,000 POSTS!!! CONGRATULATIONS BL!![]()
You are believing the negative hype. The truth of the matter is that the average auto worker's salary is less than $44K/year (this info is coming from the U.S. Bureau of Labor and Statistics). Just to put that in context, the weighted average poverty threshold for a family of four in 2007 was $21,203 as defined by the U.S. Office of Management and Budget. Then median income in the United States is a little over $43K. If you made that much money and wanted to send your kid to Harvard, they would waive the tuition fees since your household income would be less than $60K. And you want to say that unions are the problem? That is hardly the case.
If more people made enough money to afford one then there would be more cars on the road. That's the truth of the matter pure and simple. Over the last 30 years, salaries went up by 30%. That's a 1% increase annually and hardly enough to match inflation. That's your real problem. The wealthy have gotten wealthier while the poor and middle class have basically gotten shafted.
A major concern I have about this 'bailout/loan' is obviously the management of the money. What is to stop these companies from investing in their plants in Mexico, instead of the United States?
Marx, I hate to say this (not really), but, if we had a FairTax, none of this would have ever been an issue.A major concern I have about this 'bailout/loan' is obviously the management of the money. What is to stop these companies from investing in their plants in Mexico, instead of the United States?
Marx, I would sincerely hope that there would be federal oversight for this "bailout" that would prevent new overseas investment. However, I doubt it would be feasible to tell the companies that they have to limit the bailout money to already-existing operating/non-operating costs and investments that are exclusively domestic. I'm not sure how it would be done, if it could be done.
And with that, I am leaving Starbucks and heading back to the office to do some revenue/expense analysis of my own . . .
Marx, I hate to say this (not really), but, if we had a FairTax, none of this would have ever been an issue.
That's funny.Sen. Bob Bennett actually said the auto industries' cars are too well built so no one ever replaces their old cars, hence no profit.![]()
I'm interested to see which of these men perjured themselves today.....only time will tell.
....maybe they should call Patty Hewes
The salary of an employee is NOT the cost of the employee to the company--it's only a part of it.
For instance, let's say you have your $44,000 per year auto employee. The employer is responsible for paying 50% of the Social Security and Medicare Taxes (that's right: your paycheck only shows half of the total SST/MRT tax paid on your behalf). So, that's another $3,366.00. You now cost the company $47,366.00 to employ.
But, there's more. Let's say that you are one of those (like me) who pays half of your health insurance premium (while the company takes care of the other half). And, per your family plan, you're paying $400 a month out of your paycheck for premiums (which is not an unreasonable premium). That works out to $4,800 a year more that the company is paying on your behalf. So, you now cost the company $52,166. And, that's not taking into account pension or other benefits that may be provided by the employer.
BL's stats a few posts up is a perfect example of the fallacy of arguing salary alone as evidence that the unions don't bear some responsibility for the financial problems the automakers are facing. When your benefits are nearly 85% of what your salary is, the salary alone argument is wholly inadequate.
These figures are raw annual wages. They are not reduced for taxes.