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Saturday, March 13, 2010

Too Big to...Recall

I am going to take a break from watching a movie with Warren Oates in it - he's some sort of soldier and he's very good as usual - to make the observation that our economic system has probably taken a wrong turn when it strives for massive and dinosaurian economic entities.

The banks become too big to fail, at least until that time when they will be allowed to fail - for whatever reason - and die their horrible deaths.

Toyota created the Toyota system of driving costs down, which led to fewer and fewer suppliers; the fewer suppliers were easier to handle and much easier to put the thumb-screws to on costs. However, what has happened is that a problem from the low-diversity supplier gene pool has propagated through the system, like a computer virus, and this is going to cost a pretty penny.

There are no guarantees. If the Toyota system is the economic equivalent of going extinct due to lack of economic diversity, Toyota will disappear - or at least mightily change. No one would have thought of the present state of GM thirty years ago, and the pace is picking up: I think Toyota's critical time of dancing around the meteor crater of extinction will be much less, yea or nay.

Profit maximization has led to enormous companies: if bad things happen, the results are enormous. If you choose the wrong path, you may run to extinction. There will be no more bail-outs, because no one can afford it any more.

Another example is the Wal-Mart paradigm, which results in one enormous store in a community having driven out the diverse Mom and Pop operations. Something goes wrong with Wal-Mart, there is no retail anymore. And I suspect there is something going wrong with Wal-Mart, because I shop at Wal-Mart: there are simple things I cannot buy there, for various reasons. (I mentioned the Cascade dish detergent that won't remove coffee stains, whereas the Cascade from Kroger does.)

When these dinosaurs fail - and fail they will, because they are just too complex for our managerial skills - there will be...
Wait a minute! Why am I telling you this? Stick around for ten years, and you will see for yourself!

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Toyota and others knew they were having issues and attempted to hide it. All Car Companies should have came forward with a full disclosures of what car were dangerous. Instead of waiting for a huge media blitz and tons of public pressure. I never seen so many car companies GM - NISSAN - TOYOTA - HYUNDAI having recalls all at the same time. I had no idea my car was affected until I looked on http://www.carpedalrecall.com and found I had a bad Anti Lock control unit on my 2008 Pontiac G8 , my co workers Ford Truck had a recall also. So be careful

Montag said...

They do not see such responsibility are part of their mission statement: it's merely "profit maiximization".

I hope the up and coming generations have some notion of responsibility to society and the planet, because every one born before 1990 does not.

Montag said...

That wasn't quite accurate, that bit about everyone born before 1990, but you know what I mean...

We have allowed our Moral Universe to become impoverished. Morality is everywhere, not just in the Ten Commandments plaque at City Hall. A clear mission statement that includes social responsibility should be taken seriously.

Unknown said...

But as we know from Glenn Beck, "social responsibility" is just code for something unpatriotic and unAmerican.

Montag said...

Yes. What a desperate and bleak vision his is!

Add his vision to all the other apocalyptic visions of: life after the bomb, after mankind has gone, after the Mayan calendar unwinds, after peak oil,after climate change, after Gabriel sounds his horn,....the list of horrible futures goes on.

I keep asking, where are the good stories of the future? Why aren't we cracking on this?