home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Xref: sparky misc.consumers:21738 soc.culture.japan:13350 sci.electronics:22276 soc.culture.african.american:13646 misc.education:5718 misc.entrepreneurs:3890
- 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: <1993Jan8.212418.6483@island.COM>
- Sender: usenet@island.COM (The Usenet mail target)
- Organization: /usr/local/rn/organization
- References: <thomasd.59.726252693@tps.COM> <1993Jan6.161516.2237@island.COM> <thomasd.64.726424237@tps.COM>
- Date: Fri, 8 Jan 1993 21:24:18 GMT
- Lines: 326
-
- In article <thomasd.64.726424237@tps.COM> thomasd@tps.COM (Thomas W. Day) writes:
- >In article <1993Jan6.161516.2237@island.COM> fester@island.COM (Mike Fester) writes:
- >
- >>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.
-
- >I could have if I had seen those examples. How does anyone buy Toys-R-Us,
- >isn't that a retail outlet selling mostly Japanese made toys? What's your
- >point? Do you think the whole country is going to exist on those examples?
-
- I would have thought that obvious, even to you. It IS possible to compete
- in Japan, Mr Day.
-
- >Haven't you noticed the down sizing of even Microsoft, let alone IBM, GM,
- >Ford, Dodge, and the non-existence of companies that were giants just a few
- >decades ago?
-
- I have also noticed the same thing in Nissan, Toyota, Nomura, etc. Read the
- SF Chronicle, Wall Street Journal, LA Times, etc.
-
- >>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?
-
- >That's one of the ways. The other way "American businesses got into
- >trouble" was by ignoring all of the markets they didn't have the skills to
- >participate in, like small cars. I'm not saying that Harley should ignore
- >their present business, but they are seriously trapped in a yuppie market
- >that has limits.
-
- Right. Right now the limit is the US, Japan, and Europe.
-
- >>True. And the Japanese cannot compete with Harley.
-
- >Not true, all of the Japanese manufacturers have bikes competitive with
- >Harleys products and they do take some market share from Harley. That
- >doesn't go both ways.
-
- You're right, it doesn't. Harley is now the largest seller of large displacement
- engine motorcycles, outselling the Japanese by a good margin.
-
- >> (and Harley is now the #1 seller of large displacement bikes in the
- >>world)
-
- >Do *you* have a source for that statistic and what is the definition of
- >"large displacement bikes? Remember that a 600/750cc Honda/Yamaha/Kawasaki
- >can produce more horsepower/torque than a 1200cc Harley. That is one of the
- >pits Harley fell into when they conned Congress into protecting them in the
- >80s, by adding a tarrif to bikes with more than 700ccs. Japan began making
- >big bikes from small displacements, bikes that produced more performance
- >with less engine displacement (In words as "little tiny" as I can come by
- >for big difficult issues.)
-
- You could read the stuff off rec.motorcycles. And the definition of "large
- displacement is "over 750cc". And again, you are telling people what they
- SHOULD want. And "trap", Mr Day? All you have said is that since YOU do not like
- Harleys, the US company is doing it wrong.
-
- >>Now, in little tiny words,
-
- >Ones you can understand?
-
- Oh yes, please.
-
- >>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).
-
- >That is exactly the attitude of the American auto manufacturers in 1958 when
- >Volkswagon came to town. If/when the market shifts what will they sell?
- >This is what happened to Detroit in the 70s, the market they claimed would
- >come back to them left forever.
-
- "left forever"? Hmm. It may interest you to know that both GM and Ford outsold
- all Japanese car makers combined in the US last year. Not too bad, but again,
- how can you get upset with Ford and GM? You spent the last several paragraphs
- explaining why Harley was making a mistake selling bikes its customers want.
- As I can see below, you are going to be asking for references (though providing
- none yourself). Dec 7 SF Chronicle, business section.
-
- >>This is true; they make none of those things. They can't keep up with the
- >>demand for what they DO make.
-
- >Is that because of limited manufacturing ability/resources or because huge
- >growth in those areas still can't keep up with demand?
-
- In either case, WHY would they move into a different niche? A lower profit
- one at that? And Harley HAS opened up several new factories to produce
- different parts for their bikes, new painting facilities, etc, so it would
- seem to be the latter. Read the bike mags.
-
- >>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?
-
- >By quality, I mean a bike that can go for miles with minimal
- >maintenance, Harley has never had that kind of reputation. I mean a
- >bike that is competitive on the track. Harley has to limit
- >participation in the few races they are able to compete in. I mean a
- >bike that is reasonably priced for the delivered performance. It is easy to
- >find a similar machine for significantly less money than a Harley, $3-4k
- >less.
-
- Then it would seem that CUSTOMERS (people who pay money) would have different
- priorities than you do, does it not? Or are merely so much more intelligent
- than other consumers? And they do not seem to be those ride race bikes
- exclusively.
-
- >Indian might live again except for start up costs, probably. I'd
- >suspect they would sell a "bundle" of bikes if they could produce the
- >product. The problem would be the same as Harley will face, if they only
- >produce "replicas of the past" their lifetime is limited.
-
- >>>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!)
-
- >A non-biker who has been riding bikes since 1963, the last decade Harley
- >was competitive on any track in America. Would you like to race, pal? Be
- >warned that I think of racing as war, the same attitude Japan applies to
- >manufacturing.
-
- OOOOOOOOOOH! Riding THAT long and STILL don't understand how some people
- prefer non-racing bikes? Personally, I think of WAR as war, and you have yet
- to demonstrate any knowledge of how the Japanese think. And I am one of the
- touring bikers, Mr Day, and have been since I started riding (about 20 years
- ago).
-
- >Ooh wee! A belt drive. Wow, what a major achievement! The motor
- >vibrates so badly that they need a shock absorbing drive system to provide
- >a miniscule amount of rear wheel control. I'm impressed.
-
- Well apparantly so are the CUSTOMERS who are, after all, the people who keep a
- business in business.
-
- >I don't think you want to get into the engineering aspect of motorcycling.
- >You don't seem to have a clue. So I'm off of that tack from here out.
-
- And you don't seem to have a clue about marketting and selling. And any sort
- of stuff you want to post on motorcycle engineering, feel free to post. Feel
- free to post them on rec.motorcycles, or to posts your repugance of Harleys
- to rec.motorcycles.harley. I'll see 'em there.
-
- >>Also, Honda (that biking giant) is scaling BACK its production and model
- >>introduction in Japan.
-
- >Because of a market crash in the early 80s and liability crisis that is
- >driving everyone out of motorcycling, they have been scaling back their
- >American motorcycle sales projections since at least 1983. All of the
- >Japanese companies are doing that. Why do you think they got into cars?
-
- Uh, excuse me Mr Day, but IF there is a "liability crisis that is driving
- everyone out of motorcycling" and a "market crash" WHY are you proposing
- Harley get into MORE niches in the market? In all honesty, you don't even make
- BAD sense. Are you proposing they set out to lose money?
-
- >>(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.
-
- >Would you mind telling me where you got your statistics? I'm not doubting
- >them, it's just hard to get specific data on Japanese manufacturing
- >quantities and profitability.
-
- You COULD read the Japanese bike magazines, you could read the SF Chronicle, or
- follow the posts on rec.motorcycles; the Harley as #1 was posted several times
- this year. The BMW stat was listed in the BMW News mag.
-
- >>The FACT remains that Harley IS making money, LOTS of money
-
- >The point is, for how long? Or are they just another American company that
- >doesn't even have a 5 year plan?
-
- Let's see, now you seem to admit that they ARE doing something right (though
- they're not doing it YOUR way), and your worry is "how long"? How long does
- ANY company make money, Mr Day? As long as they provide a product the
- *CUSTOMER* wants, at a price s/he is willing to pay, and their management is
- competent enough to take advantage of it.
-
- >>??? 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.
- >
- >There's that stat again. They got Japan to change internal restrictions by
- >offering to lower ours.
-
- ??? You are going to have to explain this. Too many big words for me.
-
- As posted before (so this is only the 3rd time you might have seen it) it was
- the JAPANESE manufacturers who got their OWN government to lift restrictions
- on domestic sale of large displacement (> 750cc) bikes.
-
- >>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)?
-
- >Our ancestors use their natural resources well. We are living off of the
- >fruits of their efforts. But now, we are spending our resources in similar
- >ways as the Middle East.
-
- Again, there doesn't seem to be any correlation between healthy economies and
- having one's own natural resources. Or Russia, China, Brazil, etc, would all
- be economic giants, and Japan, Germany, France, etc, would be consigned to
- decidedly lower status.
-
- >>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.
-
- >What is the "largest manufacturing section in the world?" Does that mean we
- >have the most people employed in manufacturing? The most productive people
- >in manufacturing? What is the point of a claim like that?
-
- None, I suppose, unless your claim that our manufacturing sector was
- disappearing had any "point". If your claim was nonsense, then there was no
- point in my response.
-
- >>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?
-
- >One possiblity might be themselves here. As they buy up our real estate and
- >profitable business, they are moving here in droves. Take a look at Hawaii
- >and California and the midwestern ranching areas.
-
- I live in California, and believe me, there are going to have to be a LOT
- of Japanese moving here to outnumber the Chinese. Second of all, Hawai has
- had a LARGE population of people of Japanese ancestry for a long time. Third,
- WHY would they move here "in droves" if we are going to be so depressed? Are
- people moving in droves to (eg) India to enjoy some sort of enhanced life-style?
- And as posted by a Mr Goldman several months ago, there is a quota of about
- 20,000 immigrants from Japan every year. That quota has gone unfilled for a
- very long time. Doesn't look like they're moving here in droves.
-
- >>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.
-
- >The Great Depression figure was mostly undoctored. I only said I don't
- >believe the current figures are reliable and explained why. If you know
- >what the undoctored figure is, print it. Better than what? It looks like a
- >war zone in Chicago, in my lifetime Indianapolis has always looked dead,
- >North Bend is on federal relief holiday.
-
- Undoctored, as released last month, it was averaging between 7-9% for the
- various midwestern states. California had a 12% rate. SF Chronicle. Or don't
- you believe that, either?
-
- And IF, in your lifetime, Indianapolis has always looked dead, and IF you have
- been racing motorcycles since 1963 (perhaps you were 10 years old at the time)
- then since at LEAST 1953, Indianapolis has been dead. Now, as NO ONE has yet
- denied that we had a pretty decent economy in the 50s and early 60s (or, I can
- post more data), HOW HAS THE JAPANESE "TAKEOVER" MENTALITY BEEN RESPONSIBLE
- FOR THE DEMISE OF THE MIDWEST? Or do you not mean for us to use that as one of
- your examples?
-
- >>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.
-
- >I hope you are smart enough to be nervous about that.
-
- ??? Why be nervous about it? Obviously, one of the world's great economies has
- learned to live with an unemployment rate we would find unacceptable. Oh, the
- rearming thing? As posted several times before, WHY would countries start to
- build up their militaries, if a similar build-up was a cause of our current
- problems?
-
- >>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.
-
- >What company are you queen of? "We," right.
-
- How clever.
-
- >How would the opposite of your evidence help? If we are all sinking,
-
- Would the opposite of evidence help? You mean blatant assertionism?
-
- >that won't make for any happier a future than if only America drops. If
- >you haven't seen statistics listing America standings in infant
- >mortality, life expectancy, emergency care, and general health. I will
- >watch the New England Journal of Medicine for their next posting.
-
- You can read the same thing in the World Almanac. Our infant mortality rate
- has dropped, our life expectancy has risen, from 90-91. It also shows our
- death rate has decreased almost every year for the last 30+, etc.
-
- >>We're waiting.
-
- >As usual, with your eyes closed.
-
- Please post any DATA you may find that contradicts what I have posted.
-
- >>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"?
-
- >You really don't believe in under-employment, do you? I've seen you fight
- >this battle on the NET before. I'll watch for the next post on that for you
- >too.
-
- And then all you have to do is show that Japan, Germany (with all those out
- of work engineers from the east) do NOT have at least as large an "under-
- employment" problem as does the US.
-
- Really Mr Day, if you've seen this all before, one would think you were better
- able to respond by now.
-
- 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.
-