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12-10-2010, 07:20 PM | #211 | |||
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Great Wall’s great leap forward
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12-10-2010, 08:48 PM | #212 | ||
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300 a month last year, 700 a month this year. If they keep doubling every year 2011= 1400 per month. 2012 = 2800, 2013= 5600, 2014= 11200. Throw in a couple of other chinese players just a few years behind and you can almost predict the end of Australian car manufacturing by 2016. Its quite odd that a chinese company is able to predict what the Australian consumers want, but the local manufacturers have trouble doing this.
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12-10-2010, 08:55 PM | #213 | ||
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12-10-2010, 09:09 PM | #214 | |||
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12-10-2010, 09:26 PM | #215 | ||
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First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win
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12-10-2010, 09:57 PM | #216 | |||
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The Chinese didn't predict anything. We are a nation of full of misers who will drive 5km out of their way to 'save' 4c a litre on petrol. What do you think Ford sales would be like if they sold near identical vehicles in each segment at a similar price?? Prob double would be my guess... The Chinese are the masters of making things cheaply. This is the ONLY reason why they have the sales they do. It was only a matter of time for this to happen. |
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13-10-2010, 12:15 AM | #217 | |||
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13-10-2010, 11:12 AM | #218 | |||
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Put them in a falcodore, and they suddenly become top quality?? |
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13-10-2010, 01:29 PM | #219 | |||
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Still living with the guilt of owning one?
How many local jobs do foreign cars support? Ford may buy some parts from other nations where our previous industries here have been decimated by imports, but they keep building them though, as does Holden and to a lesser extent Toyota. The follow on effect from this is hundreds of thousands of Australians' lives enriched through our car companies, and no amount of self-ingratiation and grand-standing by an ignoramus with a proclivity for cheap will convince the bulk of this forum to support a cheap import. If you love your great wall good for you. Just don't expect to come here with prophecies of doom for the locals based on supposition extrapalated from your own imagination. Tell the Salvo's.......... They care.
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13-10-2010, 02:05 PM | #220 | |||
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Hyundai proved you don't need quality to sell volume, but add some quality and your sales sky rocket. Give the Chinese some time to refine their cars and they will prove to be quite a force in the automotive segment.
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13-10-2010, 02:12 PM | #221 | ||
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I'm no expert but I reckon they will increase in sales once they have a diesel as an option.
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13-10-2010, 03:20 PM | #222 | ||||||
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The australian car manufacturing industry has been dying for years (450,000 a year a few years back, 225,000 last year, and just a little bit more this year), and yet australia still has a very low unemployment rate, and growing wages. |
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13-10-2010, 03:32 PM | #223 | |||
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The problem with moving away from Australian manufacturing doesn't hurt us badly when the dollar is high. When the dollar drops all of the imported goods will bounce in price. Clothes, tires, food and cars will all be effected.That is the point when people go 'oh **** I should have bought Australian instead of saving a couple of dollars. It's now costing me a fortune.' |
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13-10-2010, 03:32 PM | #224 | ||
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have you been sacked by one of the aussie car manufacturers bob..??.. you seem to have more hangups than a drycleaners when it comes to the aussie car makers......
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13-10-2010, 04:29 PM | #225 | ||||||||
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As for the reason they left, how about you actually look at the costs of manufacturing tyres as well as the relative cost of rubber in a low volume rubber producing country. That and the cost of crude oil too. For further reference, look at the import pressures pacific dunlop faced as a result of reducing tarriffs in the 70's and 80's; the same tarriffs which threaten our auto industry. Quote:
Tell me, if Australian cars are so woeful in quality how does ford have two brands in the top ten of the last JD Power quality survey? Must be all that bad quality that got them there huh? Quote:
As for the unemployment rate, that has more to do with mining than anything else. Further, wages have grown at less than the CPI for the last two years, whereas costs have increased over double CPI thanks to charges like utilities, taxes and other imposts. If you can't see this then you're living in a fools paradise. I realise you'll never understand any of this as you're trying to justify why you bought a cheap chinese car, but for the love of all things holy proclaim your prophecies of doom for ford at [HTML]http://www.i'm_a_sellout_troll.com[/HTML]
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13-10-2010, 05:53 PM | #226 | ||||||
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All I am doing is expressing my opinion and winding in my reel every so often. |
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13-10-2010, 11:49 PM | #227 | |||
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But FordOZ more or less saved BTR/ION/DSI (whatever their name is this week) from bankruptcy. But the old Borg Warner 4 speed slusher is too old. AFAIK the only customer now is Ssangyong who were in/going into bankruptcy..
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13-10-2010, 11:56 PM | #228 | ||
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Yeah Wattot you're right Ssangyong bought out Drivetrain International when it went in recievership yet again, but I believe it was sold off to Geely (Chinese motor car company) a couple of months ago?
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14-10-2010, 12:38 AM | #229 | |||
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Free trade is the murderer of manufacturing and the primrose path to the loss of national sovereignty and the end of our independence......... http://www.amconmag.com/article/2003/aug/11/00007/ BTW, Australia currently has one of the lowest tariffs of any automotive producing country so the playing field is already not level. |
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14-10-2010, 08:26 AM | #230 | ||||
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Problem is, there's far too many who fail to support the locals, then complain when prices are increased. When they run out of options, they'll blame the very car makers they refused to support who have since gone bust. It's like the Holden V Ford thing. Fact is, Ford need Holden and Holden need Ford. What really gets my ire though is people who would blindly support a foreign manufacturer who does no R&D, reverse engineers everything, has no work safety acumen; ostensibly avoids the cost of others and then floods our markets with cheap crap. It is short sighted, it is self absorption and it is the epitome of the hypocrite. These very same people wouldn't accept working conditions like China's themselves, but are happy to propagate these practices through their own purchasing decisions. If history is any judge then people would stay a mile away from Chinese cars, as all of their previous efforts in electronics, appliances and others have been of dubious quality to say the least. What’s more, whilst it's all too easy for the ignorant to be blasé about our own manufacturers, these same people haven't acknowledged that outsourcing to the third world is the death knell to our own economy; jobs, exports etc. Further, we witness daily what gets outsourced and yet these incredibly ignorant people haven't managed to join the dots between outsourcing and the very future of their own employment. It smacks of stupidity and one can only hope that those who do lose their jobs, are the very same who advocate sending our industries off shore. I don't despise foreign cars, I despise the fact that we make employment in this country expensive but commensurate with the developed world, then drop our pants and bend over a barrel for the developing world to positively ream our local industry whilst removing any protection our industries had. This continues unabated and successive governments and ministers who have fostered this so called "free trade" farce deserve to be made redundant themselves.
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14-10-2010, 09:40 AM | #231 | ||
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Excellant post Itd
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14-10-2010, 02:08 PM | #232 | |||||||||
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Yep, people got it right when they said that about the japanese 30 years ago, and the South Koreans 20 years ago. Quote:
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And yet, every time we vote, we just vote out one twit and vote another in. Communism looks good, maybe then we could woo great wall motors to our shores. Tank roo rery ruch signed. RobtheRilda |
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14-10-2010, 03:42 PM | #233 | |||
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Check out the news tonight and there might (if the media can get their brain out of a hole in Chile) be something on a meeting held at Griffith today where approx 5000 showed up. I think this is a bigger issue than some chinese cars coming into the country. How about all your food/fibre coming from there as well? |
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14-10-2010, 07:12 PM | #234 | |||
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You need to get out more http://www.australiafirstparty.com.a...d=20&Itemid=29 TRADE Trade is important to all national economies, but to kill off your home-grown manufacturing and agricultural industries in the pursuit of foreign trade is criminally irresponsible! Jobs across Australia are being lost, because the government lets in cheap Third World imports (from Asia, Africa, and South America), made in places where they earn $1 per hour or less. Industries across Australia are being lost, because businesses are contracting out to Third World manufacturing companies - to take advantage of cheap labour and special Third World deals. These cheap products are then imported into Australia. We lose Australian jobs because products aren't being made here; and Australian companies are sent broke because they can't compete with cheap labour countries - leading to even more job losses. And the Liberal-Labor politicians have deliberately enabled all this by destroying Australia's traditional industrial protection - by dismantling the tariff barriers which protected Australian jobs for so long. Farmers across Australia have been forced to bulldoze their trees into the ground because the government lets in cheap fruit and juice imports from the Third World. Australia's national pool of wealth is being drained, because the government is letting foreign companies buy up existing successful Australian businesses, and then decades of Australian-grown profits are channeled overseas. LOSING AUSTRALIA'S FUTURE TO OVERSEAS True foreign investment is when an overseas company actually invests in Australia by creating a business which we lack here, such as setting up a company to make helicopters. Buying an existing business creates no real wealth for Australia. Usually, the money is paid out to shareholders who would normally either spend it or reinvest it in another existing business - no new business enterprise is created, yet the nation has just lost a steady turnover of profits - wealth that has been created in Australia is lost to foreign countries, and that draining of wealth continues every year as profits leave the country. The widespread loss of wealth, machinery, and expertise to foreign countries means that Australia is becoming a poorer, less resourceful, and clueless country; and - as time goes on - we will find it harder and harder to re-establish lost industries from scratch. Past Prime Minister Bob Hawke, in his rhetoric designed to rid us of industrial protection, used to speak of Australia as needing to become the “clever country”. What a con that was. As if all industrialised countries weren't intent on becoming “clever” too. The “clever country” theory - supported by both Liberal and Labor - was basically that Asia would provide us with cheap goods, whilst we would provide them with services in technology, etc. Did they think Asians are dumb? That even though most Asian countries have Westernised industry and technology, that somehow we were so much cleverer in all things, that they would always come to us for our expertise? Liberal-Labor have long sought to globalise Australia, to make us a part of a corporatised future where money and people continuously ebb and flow across the globe; a future where borders and nations no longer exist; a future that would, long-term, lead to the death of national and ethnic diversity - a financial and demographic borderless one-world state. The “right” want it so that the world can become the playground of big business, and the “left” want it so that they can merge and destroy distinct races and nationalities. Only nationalists can provide a true alternative to the Brave New World of Liberal-Labor. Only Australian nationalists have the interests of the Australian People at heart. We must oppose globalisation to ensure the future of the Australian Nation. The answer to globalisation and the destruction of our nation's wealth is to strengthen Australia's economic sovereignty. This can be achieved by instituting financial policies that will benefit Australia: Create tariff barriers to minimise cheap Third World imports, and to thus save Australian jobs and industries. Halt the sale of Australian companies to foreign interests. Re-establish lost industries, by supporting the return of expertise and technological knowledge. Invest in long-term technical and practical know-how by investing in technical schools and trade schools, as well as giving financial incentives to research and development. |
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14-10-2010, 08:26 PM | #235 | ||||
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Ford, even Holden at least does good work. We see that Ford seems to getting more R&D work so they are quote good. I would say (I guess from experience as well) that Fords OZ issue is budgets. If they can get better budgets for a car that can spread their R&D & parts budget I would see a much better car. Quote:
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14-10-2010, 09:01 PM | #236 | |||
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100% Right What we do when there is no more coal We dont make anything much anymore We import Pork thanks to the Howard Govt We might import Beef thanks to Julia Why do we need another brand and make of car in this Country !!!! Oh yes , to help destroy the local market |
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14-10-2010, 09:29 PM | #237 | ||
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This is an emotive subject.
To those who are suggesting "globalism" or the "free market" are to blame, consider this: the economic trade system used in the world in the last 30 years has been far from a free market. Other nations have deliberately devalued their currencies, effectively a massive tariff supporting their manufacturers. Just watch Japan squirm, create a Y5Trillion fighting fund, all to devalue the yen, making their goods cheaper. They are losing this unfair advantage, and despite their best attempts the market will slap the Bank of Japan, for the US is beginning to play the same game. (When you hear "Quantitative Easing" think "printing up billions of currency from nowhere and burying it in any commodity or asset" - including your opponent's currency! Threat of QE2 is the reason precious metals are rallying, and equities markets and commodities are supported higher. Real QE means everything goes up - eventually cost of living, too. It's a mug's game. Historically, it mirrors the tariff walls of the 1930's following the 1929 crash, and we all know where that led...) The Yuan is undervalued - a sore point in Washington at present - thus presenting Chinese manufacturers with a doubly unfair advantage: low wages and low currency. Additionally, if you note Australian attempts at boldly enforcing "free trade" agreements, you will note we are allowing their produce in (apples) while they are banning ours (table grapes) entering their country: http://www.nationals.org.au/News/Loc...t-Screwed.aspx Can we import a Falcon to China? One would do well to note that most auto manufacturers around the world are heavily government supported - no real free market there. So, get it in your head, we do not live in a global free market economy, and never have done. The effects are devastating, and easy to see. Imports flood the domestic market and push the price below that which domestic businesses are profitable. We are surprised when they fail. Prices rise once the domestic producer/manufacturer goes under. To Australia's eternal credit, we have played the "free market" game while everyone else was playing to win. We have lowered tariffs to negligible levels, pursued free trade agreements, and allowed our currency to float - and it has appreciated to the disadvantage of our manufacturers and producers, but to the advantage of our consumption. We could/can afford it - income from our massive minerals wealth. Australians can hold their heads up high and say we played in the spirit of the game. But they would do well to think about what we have lost - our premier South Australian Auto manufacturer (they built everything there), component suppliers, our textile industry, farms, the Riverina and countless complexity across our Manufacturing and Agricultural sectors. Real income generating activities. We are currently going after our coal industry (global warming/climate change/greenhouse effect), aluminium smelters (same), and our ore miners (RSPT). The industries that have replaced our productive industries (mining, of course remains) are FIRE: Real Estate speculation and Finance. Arguably, these do not create wealth in a society, for they produce nothing tangible. Want to learn about FIRE? http://www.harpers.org/archive/2008/02/0081908 The loss of Australia's production has been complimented by extraordinarily bad policy - for example Managed Forestry Investment Schemes have seen family dairy farms replaced by tree farms, able to offer up to twice the market value for the land (anecdotal - Tasmania) based on artificial bloating via our tax dollars; the buying back of water allocations in the Murray does nothing to address the fact that all they are doing is making the water flow faster to the sea leaving the floodplains parched! (Australian rivers flow on top of their respective floodplains, or at least they used to, "topping up" the floodplain in times of flood, which is what the growers do with irrigation... - see Peter Andrews' work). The real estate market was artificially interfered with when the GFC hit, and we remain with house prices around 8-9 times average earnings when the historical average over the last 100 years in Western nations is 1.5 to 3... Some of our trade agreements only work in one direction! So if your thinking our high wage rate is the cluprit, you're only part right. Getting back to the local car industry, I for one will continue to support it. Why? Because its products are most relevant to what is needed in this continent. This is a gem of a quote from the UK based Falcon site aus-ford-uk: "When you occupy such a vast and sparsely occupied country with many miles of rough and tough roads, the virtues of simplicity of operation and maintenance, the benefits of crude but dependable and over-engineered components, and the luxury of large but understressed engines count for much more than the supposed sophistication of European products. Many options were offered to satisfy the needs of owners stretching across the continent, from protection packs that included sump guards and extra dust seals, to long range tanks offering capacities of up to 36 gallons of fuel, albeit with detrimental affect on boot space." Thanks for reading this through. I don't know if a tariff war is the answer, for I know what fruit it eventually bears. Equally I know that continuing on the path of the last 35 years (following the 1975 Lima agreement) is leading to a destitute future for our children. Just look at the US now, 22% unemployment (Shadowstats) and no revival in sight. We have been warned! Perhaps at the end of the day, keeping our market open and then slipping protection money to Ford, Holden and Toyota through the back door is the best thing we can do... Last edited by JG34JA; 14-10-2010 at 09:40 PM. |
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14-10-2010, 10:20 PM | #238 | ||||
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Re the back door (slipping protection money), why not? The EU and US have been doing it for decades with their farmers, whilst we try to destoy ours |
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15-10-2010, 08:11 AM | #239 | ||||
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Welcome to the forums.
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26-10-2010, 05:37 PM | #240 | |||
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Green light for Geely
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