aznyron wrote:you answered me like a true politician.
No, spoken like a capitalist. Wages are determined by what the market will bear.
After Hurricane Katrina, people left the city and many did not return. There was a huge demand for labor because businesses could not re-open without a staff. BK and McDonald's were paying workers as much as $10 an hour to start and cash bonuses to come to work. The demand for food and fast food was such that the market could bear the high wages and high prices of the product due to the scarcity of the product.
You couldn't arbitrarily raise wages like that Huntington, Indiana. Their market could not bear it. The same exact economic components of supply and demand do not exist everywhere.
If food was being provided through others at a cheaper price, the demand would have been met and BK and McDonald's could have opened and paid high wages if they wanted to, but people wouldn't buy there if a better product was provided elsewhere at a cheaper price. In this scenario, BK and McDonald's represent the US auto makers. They provide a product that is thought to be not as good as competitors and is too expensive; but they keep paying higher wages and operating at a loss. Why should Americans bail them out? Americans have already spoken at the cash register. They don't buy US cars as much as they used to buy them. Time to file for bankruptcy and restructure and retool.
so if honda starting paying there non union workers 50 bucks a hour and still made money would it still be the fault of the UAW ? BTW most big corporations pay there employees close to union wages to attract good employees since they do not have union protection
against age discrimination etc
The UAW is responsible for their members only.
If Honda could still make a profit by paying what US auto makers pay their employees (and don't forget the benefits, which is the HUGE drag on the US auto makers), then that would mean that the market will bear it for their automobiles.
It all works hand-in-hand. Labor is the highest, the absolute highest, cost of doing business in the US. If labor prices itself too high and the demand for the product that they build is low, the company will not make a profit. Wages need to match the profitability of the company and the product or service provided in the region.