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- Xref: sparky misc.consumers:21591 soc.culture.japan:13214 sci.electronics:22102 soc.culture.african.american:13496 misc.education:5663 misc.entrepreneurs:3860
- Newsgroups: misc.consumers,soc.culture.japan,sci.electronics,soc.culture.african.american,misc.education,misc.entrepreneurs
- Path: sparky!uunet!island!fester
- From: fester@island.COM (Mike Fester)
- Subject: Re: DOES AMERICA SAY YES TO JAPAN? - Off track!!
- Message-ID: <1993Jan6.161516.2237@island.COM>
- Sender: usenet@island.COM (The Usenet mail target)
- Organization: /usr/local/rn/organization
- References: <1993Jan01.103831.6531@deeptht.armory.com> <1993Jan4.201248.4828@island.COM> <thomasd.59.726252693@tps.COM>
- Date: Wed, 6 Jan 1993 16:15:16 GMT
- Lines: 177
-
- In article <thomasd.59.726252693@tps.COM> thomasd@tps.COM (Thomas W. Day) writes:
- >In article <1993Jan4.201248.4828@island.COM> fester@island.COM (Mike Fester) writes:
- >
- >>Ever hear of Harley-Davidson? It's conveniently located (at least,
- >>corporate headquarters) right there in "the formerly strong midwest of this
- >>country".
-
- >I really don't think using Harley as evidence that U.S. companies are
- >capable of competing is valid.
-
- Well, then you could have responded to the earlier Pampers, MacDonalds, Toys-
- R-Us, Coca-Cola, Dow-Corning, etc, examples. Then there's Sun, Microsoft,
- Apple-MacIntosh, Boeing, Hughes (they make satellites, Mr Day), and all those
- other "low tech" things that the Japanese buy just because they pity us.
-
- >Harley sells a marginal quality, specific
- >market motorcycle to people who have more money than sense.
-
- Harley owners (I am not one myself) report some of the highest levels of
- satisfaction in the industry (next to BMWs). So, are you now going to start
- telling customers what they SHOULD want? Isn't that how American businesses
- got into trouble in the first place, and how the Japanese companies took so
- much of our markets; by telling customers what they SHOULD want?
-
- > In no area is
- >Harley able to field a motorcycle that can compete with the Japanese
-
- True. And the Japanese cannot compete with Harley. Oh, little bit of info
- here: profits on these larger displacemnt bikes (and Harley is now the #1
- seller of large displacement bikes in the world) is greater than on the smaller
- bikes. Now, in little tiny words, please explain WHY a company should move into
- an area with LOWER profits, when they cannot keep up with market demand in
- their particular niche (which they dominate).
-
- I eagerly await the enlightenment you will no doubt provide on this.
-
- >majors. Harley exists for its value as a keepsake, not as a motorcycle.
- >For instance, Harley makes a bike that is matched in performance and
- >function by all of the Japanese manufacturers, but Harley doesn't make a
- >sport touring bike, a dirt bike, or a multi-purpose bike. Harley isn't
-
- This is true; they make none of those things. They can't keep up with the
- demand for what they DO make.
-
- >even the lowest cost, highest quality producer in their small niche. In
-
- Please back-up your repeated references to quality aspersions. The Harley
- owners I know seem quite pleased with the quality of bike Harley is producing.
- As for existing merely for "keepsake" value, why doesn't some marketting
- genius get the rights to Indian, and make a bundle selling those?
-
- >effect, they are making the same bike they have been making for 50 years
- >with minor "improvements." They are in the same status vehicle group as
- >Rolls Royce.
-
- Spoken like a non-biker! Now, Mr Day, in itty-bitty words, why is this BAD, and
- how does it mean that Harley is not REALLY competing? (Did Harley REALLY make
- belt-drive, Daytona Specials 50 years ago? Gee whiz!)
-
- Also, Honda (that biking giant) is scaling BACK its production and model
- introduction in Japan. (In fact, Kawasaki is aggressively attacking them, and
- Honda has reported losses in its biking section.) BMW has lost money (not a
- lot) on its bikes the past couple years. Harley has made money and is expanding.
- The FACT remains that Harley IS making money, LOTS of money, and they are one
- of the few famous bike makers to do so now. And YOU are telling them "No, no,
- you are doing it all wrong." You, Mr Day, should work for GM.
-
- >Because they have been successful in finding a small niche of
- >the motorcycle market to participate in and are the sole American
- >manufacturer in that market, they are a popular benchmark for American
- >manufacturing success. They are less of a success than is popularly
- >believed.
-
- ??? Then explain why they are a) the #1 seller of large displacement bikes
- in the world and b) they got the Japanese to change THEIR internal restrictions.
-
- >>Hmm. Don't universities do research as well?
-
- >Yep, they do. They do research for anyone who will pay the bill and they
- >educate more foreign engineers than domestic. This wouldn't be such a crime
- >if state universities weren't doing this deed with tax money.
-
- Or if more American students wanted to BE engineers. And BTW, many of those
- "foreigners" are in fact immigrants. As were your ancestors. I would not call
- them "foreigners".
-
- >>>The Japanese can give us all jobs working for them at $7.50 and hour and
- >>>end unemployment completely, and maybe they can even pay us all a bit more,
- >>>but if the profit above and beyond goes back to Japan, and the ideas that
- >>Excuse this (obviously irrelevant) question, but *IF* we are all going to be
- >>so poor, how can Japan then continue to sell to us? Who would there be to
- >>buy their products?
-
- >The way this statement was phrased missed the point and your answer avoids
- >that same point. As long as we have natural resources to divy up we will
- >have some money to spend on luxuries. So for some years yet, we will have a
- >yuppie class and we will always be stuck with the ruling eliete and the
- >inherited rich. What we are losing is the working class.
-
- Care to give any figures? I have posted GDP and per capita results, noted that
- the US is the number 1 exporter of goods to the world (and no, Japan is NOT
- number 2). And why is it that WE have money to spend on luxeries, due to
- our natural resources, but other places with natural resources do NOT (with the
- exception of the Middle East)?
-
- And finally, we STILL have the largest manufacturing section in the world.
- OK, not quite true. Mainland China has more people employed in the
- manufacturing section. Ours is simply the most productive.
-
- And please get back to THE POINT, Mr Day. IF WE ARE GOING TO BE DRIVEN OUT
- OF EXISTENCE AND INTO SUCH A BLEAK FUTURE, WHO WILL THE JAPANESE SELL THEIR
- GOODS TO, THEN?
-
- >>Strange, is it not, that they have HIGHER unemployment than we do (in areas
- >of>Germany, that 30% figure you doctored above is an undoctored fact). And
- >that>they have similar budget deficits.
-
- >I'm not convinced the 30% midwestern unemployment figure is "doctored." Our
- >published national statistics (if I remember correctly) don't include anyone
- >not on the unemployment insurance roles. This leaves out the "terminally
- >unemployed" (people who have been out of work 6 months or more) and of
- >course people who once were middle class but are now working at McDonalds.
- >I was in Indiana for a few months last year and it certainly seemed like a
- >ruin. Every job posting had hundreds of applicants and most of the
- >industrial facilities were abandoned.
-
- News flash: 30% was what the national average was in the Great Depression. Now,
- if you have EVIDENCE that the 30% figure is correct, please post it. In the
- spirit of the little anecdote you present above, my sister in Illinois and
- one of my best friends in Indiana both say things are getting better.
-
- And completely OUT of the spirit of your little anecdotes, the unemployment
- rates in parts of (esp the former East) Germany exceed 30%. Even before
- reunification, 10 -12% unemployment was the norm in West Germany.
-
- >>Actually, in terms of per capita income, living space, technology, etc, we
- >>are, in fact, doing better. More airports, physicians, lower unemployment,
- >>etc.
-
- >I agree with "living space" (I suppose you could group airports in this
- >category.), but this is only the result of our possessing more natural
- >resources. Resources which are being bought up at a rapid rate. I disagree
-
- Tell that to Russia.
-
- >with the rest of your list, especially "technology." More physicians hasn't
- >resulted in any measureable advantage in our national health statistics so
- >that point is voided. The doc stat is skewed by the irrational distribution
-
- How so? And show how it is better in Europe.
-
- >of physicians, check the rural areas for medical coverage. Until our
-
- Now please post how this is better in Europe, or we shall be sorely tempted
- to "void" your points. Show us how France, Germany, Britain, and any other
- European nations of your choosing have it better.
-
- We're waiting.
-
- >unemployment stats include every out-of-work adult, the military (they were
- >counted as unemployed until sometime in the 1970s, I believe), and the make-
- >work positions in local, state, and federal government, I won't be convinced
- >that data is significant.
-
- I see. So, people who ARE working are not really working? Well, this IS
- irrefutable. Please post any DATA you feel IS relevant. Or do you simply "know
- what you know"?
-
- (And then show us how the stats for Japan and Europe are NOT similarly
- "doctored").
-
- Mike
- --
- Disclaimer - These opinions are not so much opinions, as pearls of wisdom. Any-
- one disagreeing is obviously either a) a snivelling, whining, mentally-
- deficient, weak-willed, inconsequential, namby-pamby tool of some vague but
- conveniently defined conspiracy, or b) my wife.
-