There Goes The Country

General Motors is but a microcosm of what most ails the U.S. economy. For decades, GM rested on its laurels. Its management yielded to innumerable, exorbitant trade union demands, passing the costs on to consumers in the form of lower quality products. The result was that higher quality foreign cars, eventually also produced domestically by American workers, severely eroded GM’s once dominant market position. The company’s autonomy was effectively extinguished by the growing debt needed to finance this downward spiral. Investors, believing that GM was “too big to fail,” continued to accept the company’s high-risk paper.  FULL ARTICLE

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2 comments

#1 Allen Tran on 06.03.09 at 10:25 pm

…and good riddance!

#2 Frank-O on 06.04.09 at 7:14 am

I think the country’s been long gone for a long time.  What we see now is just the final blows.  A slow, ugly death.

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