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08-06-2013, 09:16 PM | #1 | |||
Pity the fool
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Wait Awhile
Posts: 8,997
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What a shame it has taken something as significant as Ford announcing its factory closures for people to start coming out and stating the bleeding obvious.
http://www.goauto.com.au/mellor/mell...257B830021072F Quote:
That Golf assembly plant sounds interesting though.
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08-06-2013, 09:24 PM | #2 | ||
Sales Representative
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Young
Posts: 5,314
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Increase the taxes on imports, and help the locals... sounds simple, and yet our governments for the last however many decades just cannot see this...
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08-06-2013, 10:06 PM | #3 | ||
Regular Member
Join Date: Nov 2011
Posts: 185
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Increasing taxes on the imports would have the same effect as closing the gate after the horse has bolted. May as well just give up and stop supporting the car industry and find something else this country can do. I hear we are very good at digging up dirt and sending it overseas.
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08-06-2013, 11:01 PM | #4 | ||
Banned
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 3,290
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I can see the headline now "Ford leaving saves holden" the ultimate self sacrifice another victory for ford all hail the great and power ford now lets say 30 hail fords. And pass the collection plate for holden
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08-06-2013, 11:16 PM | #5 | ||
YE-US! Wait. I don't know
Join Date: May 2010
Location: in the turkey...
Posts: 940
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Bill is switched on. Don't know him myself, but I know people who work for SAE.
Better late than never I suppose. Fingers crossed it filters into Ford reconsidering staying/gov co convincing them to stay/some other scenario where they don't leave.
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08-06-2013, 11:55 PM | #6 | ||
Performance moderator
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: St Clair..N.S.W
Posts: 14,875
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As in before the financial crisis.. Ford was one of the FIRST to do something about its position !!
Could be what's going on here?? After all I doubt Holden is going to make money selling cars people don't want in masses..If they can import much cheaper then there's every chance they'll do ok..Governments the last 30 years don't care about local industry..
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09-06-2013, 12:24 AM | #7 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Melb north
Posts: 12,025
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Its a nice idea he has, but theres about 4 times as many germans to buy golfs locally than there is here, and I wonder if the germans have a fair trade agreement that shoots their industry in the foot?? As for robots my bet is they cost a packet to implement and a lot in energy to run.
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09-06-2013, 12:55 AM | #8 | ||
Cynical Idealist
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: Orlando, FL, USA
Posts: 1,512
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All hail robots!
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09-06-2013, 01:30 AM | #9 | ||
Donating Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Sydney
Posts: 1,940
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Population keeps growing, yet technology and globalisation causes us to rely less and less on physical human input. When will it all end!! Are we all going to become beggers on the street one day, or slaves for the top 2% of society???
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09-06-2013, 08:24 AM | #10 | ||
Regular Member
Join Date: Jun 2012
Posts: 206
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We have a FTA with Thailand that is CLEARLY, PLANLY and OBVIOUSLY destroying an Australian industry and costing thousands of jobs and with it throwing many lives into turmoil.
And what is the Australian government doing? ******* nothing! Sickens me beyond words. Last edited by AU1XLS; 11-06-2013 at 01:13 PM. |
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09-06-2013, 11:39 AM | #11 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: On The Footplate.
Posts: 5,086
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Quote:
Except now the audience does know better...they know what they've been missing out on. I imagine some of you would be old enough to remember the seventies and the first time you either bought or went for a ride in a friends or family members "funny foreign car", and been amazed at the standard features...disc brakes, AM/FM stereo, rear window demister, air conditioning, cloth interiors...they seem simple things now, but back then they were options on Australian cars, and the cheap stuff that people bought just didn't have what foreign cars had as standard. The makers here didn't have to try harder, as they assumed they would always be protected by tariffs and taxes. Sometimes...even today with the FG when compared to overseas cars...the foreign competition has features that simply don't exist in our home grown big sedans. Strongly protecting our industry to force people to buy Australian cars like "the good old days"...? Be careful what you wish for.. |
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09-06-2013, 12:14 PM | #12 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 18,988
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what you are obviously blind too see the button plan was not dynamic and allow for changes on the world manuf scene... bye bye aus manuf... |
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09-06-2013, 01:46 PM | #13 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Melb north
Posts: 12,025
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Quote:
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09-06-2013, 01:57 PM | #14 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: On The Footplate.
Posts: 5,086
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A clever businessman...one who runs a long lasting and profitable organisation that is...can face up to reality and realise there are some things he just can't do himself, so he will do one of two things: employ someone to develop and do it for him, or if that isn't cost effective, hire some outside firm to do efficiently it for him at a substantially lower cost.
No real difference between a business and running a country. If we can't effectively and cheaply make the cars the customer obviously wants, then we can do as other small countries do and pick and choose the best from around the world to supply our needs. Playing on tradition or feeling the need to keep propping up an industry that honestly there is nothing magical about having in your country (making your own cars) doesn't face reality. |
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09-06-2013, 02:20 PM | #15 | ||
The One Who Knocks
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Kalgoorlie
Posts: 1,196
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But people are calling for/wishing that the government had built a figurative wall around Australia and not allowed any imports in, in the first place. A captive market is easy to please...
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09-06-2013, 02:25 PM | #16 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Melb north
Posts: 12,025
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2011g6e not only do we lose car makers, we lose value in technology developed here, we lose employment across the board, we become more dependant upon other countries for goods we can and should be making here , and apart from every thing else, it is wrong on principle to throw our own industry away due to poor trading deals that benefit countries other than our own.
as for the being clever thing i`m betting if we had a real clever and honest fair trade deal between countries our car industries would be kicking on without needing handouts. Uberknee, i don't think that is the general consensus at all, i think the general consensus is that most just want a fair trading deal....as it should be. |
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09-06-2013, 03:32 PM | #17 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jan 2010
Posts: 11,363
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Bottom line, our Australian auto manufacturing industry has been thrown under a bus because
people want cheap imported vehicles and don't want to support Australian made anymore.. That was in essence the effect of the Button Plan and elimination of Tariffs, Ford and Holden were mortally wounded years ago, it's just that we never realised it until now... |
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09-06-2013, 03:36 PM | #18 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: On The Footplate.
Posts: 5,086
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Quote:
As I said, go back to the seventies when protectionism of the local car industry was high...our neighbour, a Holden man through and through, had just bought his latest Kingswood wagon, a V8 Vacationer. My old man within a week of this bought our latest car, a Mazda 929 wagon, top of the line. The 929 had air con, a floor shift four speed, and AM/FM radio cassette fitted from the factory with four, count 'em four speakers (and the aerial concealed in the windscreen glass!), and window tinting amongst other standard fittings. The neighbour had his faith badly shaken when he took my old mans car for a drive...he was seriously wondering if his next car would be a Holden at all. Britain went through it with their car industry, yet their industry, after chopping out all the dead wood and getting rid of makes that just couldn't keep up with modern times, is better than ever. Our car makers need to sit down and take a good long hard look at themselves and more importantly what they're competing against and what the public wants, and don't just keep trying to rely on selling cars the old fashioned way which doesn't work anymore: that being multi-generational badge-blind buyers who will just unquestioningly and automatically trundle down every couple of years and buy a Holden/Falcon just because daddy had one and his daddy had one. |
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09-06-2013, 03:56 PM | #19 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 770
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Quote:
Nothing is over til it's over and times and/or decisions change every day just like they have in the past Maybe this is the wake up call the brain dead pollies needed to change the situation for the better |
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09-06-2013, 04:13 PM | #20 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 18,988
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there is a big difference between open market fair and reciprocal trade agreements and being an automotive dumping ground........
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09-06-2013, 04:33 PM | #21 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jan 2010
Posts: 11,363
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Quote:
Thailand is a joke, the place is set up to be an export nation with zero intent of importing anything from Australia. |
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09-06-2013, 05:05 PM | #22 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Location: Melb north
Posts: 12,025
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you might be right, but it doesn't seem that way, and what about the rest of the world ???
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09-06-2013, 05:59 PM | #23 | |||
The One Who Knocks
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Kalgoorlie
Posts: 1,196
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Quote:
A basic Mercedes/BMW/Audi/etc. that sells for peanuts everywhere else is a $100k+ here which keeps it out of most peoples reach. Overall the biggest sellers here are generally Ford/GM/Toyota/Nissan/Mazda with everyone else selling in small volume. So local manufactures still have plenty of opportunity, you look at America where typically Pontiac/Chevy/Ford/Dodge/BMW/Mercedes/Jaguar and several others are all the big volume players. America has a flooded market, every manufacturer in the world sells there yet its still the American brands that sell the biggest due to building the right cars/advertising/etc. Australia really doesn't have it that bad, most of these cars supposedly 'flooding our markets' are priced for footballers, not the average buyer. The way to save local manufacturing is not by making life harder for imports but by local manufacturers building cars that are relevant to the times. 400kw GTS's and blown GTs might appeal to performance enthusiasts by the average buyer either doesn't care or it just ins't practical enough for a modern day family. Rather than focusing on the near dead large car market focus on SUVs that out sell them hand over fist. |
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09-06-2013, 07:12 PM | #24 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Location: On The Footplate.
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But someone will always come along who can do what you're doing better and cheaper, and if you don't move with the times you die.
The British bike industry ruled the world for decades, until out of the blue the Japs who had been making funny little commuter bikes for many years all of a sudden brought out things like the Honda 750 Four, the Kawasaki two stroke triples, and the Z900 Kawasaki. The Brit bike industry couldn't...or wouldn't...adapt, too stuck with ideas of "tradition", and it sadly died a quick death, not really recovering until the late 1990's ad really finding it's feet in only the last ten years or so. The car makers in the USA, Australia, and, to a lesser extent, Europe, faced a similar onslaught from cheaper and better made and better equipped Japanese cars in the seventies and into the eighties. Some of the car makers suffered from the same stale ideas of appealing to tradition, which worked about as well as it did for the British motorcycle industry. They've never really recovered and it's gone from the days of it being a little odd to own a Jap car, to being quite normal. Then in the late eighties and into the 1990's we had to face the Korean onslaught...starting out with cheap cars that were just rubbish, to today where we see amazing things like the Veloster, which no one would have imagined even ten years ago coming out of Korea. Now, we see the emergence of China and their vast industrial complex...if anyone honestly thinks their cars are going to remain flimsy cheap buckets of bolts and are nothing for our car makers to be worried about, they've got rocks in their head. Times change...but things like this just seem to keep going around in cycles... That's not being fatalistic or derogatory to the local industry...it's just facing reality. |
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09-06-2013, 07:44 PM | #25 | |||
The One Who Knocks
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Kalgoorlie
Posts: 1,196
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Quote:
Evolve or die. |
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09-06-2013, 08:48 PM | #26 | ||
Starter Motor
Join Date: May 2013
Posts: 20
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Aussie cars have been rough in the past at every level, build quality and very basic design, nearly junk quality but slow improvement and a major wake up call with the import of japanese cars has seen things improve to our latest aussie build cars. Ford Holden Toyota are world class and built here. Falcon had rural australia riding on its back for years and while a lot are still buying Falcons for the rural roads, sales have dropped off while the Holden Ute are like backsides everyone has one
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09-06-2013, 08:51 PM | #27 | ||
Thailand Specials
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Centrefold Lounge
Posts: 49,604
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I work in auto manufacturing industry, we should all go to Museums and we can be the attractions, teachers can come and point out to their kids about times long gone when we used to build cars.
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09-06-2013, 09:22 PM | #28 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 2,653
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Quote:
The only good thing that might come out of Ford leaving.. Is it might just save the industry for Holden & Toyota & some real change might happen!! |
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09-06-2013, 09:25 PM | #29 | ||
Moderator
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Foothills of the Macedon Ranges
Posts: 18,587
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Its not just the car and other manufacturing industries that has this big problem, its also the food products from Thailand, whether straight from there, or imported and packaged here in Australia. And there's no guarantee of how these food products are produced or where they come from.
I really think that those responsible for signing these trade agreements should be held accountable for criminally stuffing up this country, and have their fat pensions revoked. It will never happen unfortunately, politicians etc. first priority is to protect themselves. |
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09-06-2013, 09:25 PM | #30 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Location: In Front of a Monitor
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Don't we need a manufacturing industry for the sake of national security?
If there was ever a large scale world conflict how could we build / adapt vehicles for the war effort if all our current manufacturing plants are shopping malls and apartment blocks?
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