Will this Strike Kill Ford/Chevy/Chrysler?

I’m all for wage increases and a decent living but I think this group is asking for too much in a time when it will backfire on them. Let me clarify. I foresee a direct correlation between the percentage increase that the UAW settles for and a reduction of wage labor. I’ve seen this happen at other companies that had similar situations. If the union settles for 30-40% wage increases except a 30-40% reduction in wage labor. Automation and robots don’t call in sick, have attitude or refuse to do what they are asked.

In the end no one wins during a strike.

Just my $0.02
 
Replace those workers with robots That can’t get RSI.

OOPS! I hear the unions wailing again!
Robots are great…. Until they’re not. Then they’re a royal PITA to fix.

Yeah, the union demands are a bit much, but they always settle somewhere in the middle anyway. Good on them IMO. I’m sick of hearing companies boast about their grossly overpaid CEO’s and stock buybacks, only to turn around and push back hard against any kind of additional compensation or quality of life improvements for the employees who make the actual products.
 
Record profits over the last few years for manufacturers, dealers and everyone involved...but the folks assembling them are expected to make peanuts. How is that reasonable? $40k+ for a Corolla Cross but the people putting it together are making 1
$19/hr.
But isn't that any job? I make ~$23/hr in a high cost of living area while the store brings in millions every year and our stocks are doing great! My solution to this is learning a different career online on my time off and hopefully doing that in the next year or so. Do I think I should get paid more? Of course! But if I am willing to show up for $23 why pay $25? $30? Who really determines what a reasonable or acceptable wage is?
 
But isn't that any job? I make ~$23/hr in a high cost of living area while the store brings in millions every year and our stocks are doing great! My solution to this is learning a different career online on my time off and hopefully doing that in the next year or so. Do I think I should get paid more? Of course! But if I am willing to show up for $23 why pay $25? $30? Who really determines what a reasonable or acceptable wage is?

That's where collective bargaining comes in.
 
Fixed that for you
And when the Big 2.5 decide to become non-domestic automakers and offshore everything because they can’t make a profit with subpar offerings while paying king’s wages here, is that a win for the unions also?

I don’t really care either way, just as long as neither unions nor automakers get taxpayer money as “bailouts” that then get written down to soak everyone else.
 
Record profits over the last few years for manufacturers, dealers and everyone involved...but the folks assembling them are expected to make peanuts. How is that reasonable?
Peanuts you say.... I bet there are a ton of people out there that would just love getting a job on the line with the benefits and work for what you call peanuts...
 
The UAW has a seat at the table when most if not all decisions get made at the plant level, some would argue too big of a seat. I know of meetings that were attended 5 to 1 with people from the UAW outnumbering GM managers. I think in a lot of cases the UAW are the inmates running the asylum. Their inflexible stances already costs GM a lot of money.
 
Not really anti-union but these guys are out of control with their 32 hour work week and big raises. They already have the best healthcare in America except for US Congressmen and Representatives. Mr. Fain reminds me of a IRA terrorist and a grade school bully. No respect for anyone who acts like he does. I know he is being paid to act this way, but nice gets you respect.
Yeah- My Dad used to say courtesy is free but accomplishes alot
 
its humorous to me to note that when the American Middle Class ( 1950's into the 60's) was most successful, union membership was at its highest.
Back then the average CEO's pay was about 30 times what the average employees salary was.
Nowadays the average CEO's compensation is about 400 times what the average employee's wage is..

Aggregated CEO-to-worker compensation ratio for the 350 largest publicly owned companies in the United States from 1965 to 2021
https://www.statista.com/statistics... that, on average,key industry of their firm.
Nightly news said it was 362x
 
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