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Ford ex-employee asked what he thinks of Australian Industry decline - Worth a look

Thumpin

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An old mate who spent his working life with the Ford Motor Company, mainly as a computer programmer, and after the recent announcement of Ford closure in Australia, was asked what his feelings were.

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Sorry? Yes - I feel I have been let down, but I am sorrier for Australia. The problem is not just Ford; it is the whole of Australian primary and secondary industry.

When I joined the industry in 1960 Australia had the following Automotive Manufacturers:-

Ford Australia - (Plants in Geelong, Ballarat, Broadmeadows, Sydney, and Brisbane).

Australian Motor Industries. - (Standard Motor Company and Mercedes Benz, Rambler, and Fiat tractors, - plants in Melbourne and Sydney).

British Motor Corporation - (Austin, Morris - Plants in Melbourne and Sydney).

Chrysler Australia - (Plants in Keswick, Mile End and Finsbury, Continental and General Distributors -(Peugeot - plant in Heidelberg Melbourne) - bought out by Mitsubishi.

Fiat - (tractor assembly at the Pressed Metal Corporation plant in Sydney).

General Motors Holden - (Plants in Port Melbourne, Dandenong, Adelaide, and Sydney).

International Harvester - (Plant in Geelong).

Leyland Motors - (Albion and Scammel , Plants in Melbourne and Sydney).

Renault (Australia) - (assembled by Clyde Industries, Victoria).

Rootes (Australia) - (Plants at Port Melbourne and Dandenong). (Hillman etc.,)

Rover (Australia) - (Pressed Metal Corporation Sydney - most of the land rover was made and assembled in Oz).

Volkswagen (Australia) - (Plant in Clayton Victoria).

Willys Motors (Australia) - (Plant in Rocklea Brisbane).

White Trucks (Brisbane)

There was also another company assembling one of the early Japanese imports at Kangaroo Point.

Then of course there was our own Repco, a major automotive parts manufacturer and engine re-builder at that stage, and a company which was then more than capable of building the first all Australian car.

These were not fly-by-nighters, some of them were in existence as early as 1914 - one hundred years ago !!

From that foundation the only one left is GMH, whose very existence as a manufacturing facility is hanging by a thread.

I have no idea what has happened to all the major parts and machine suppliers, Duly and Hansford, Bendix, Borg Warner, Pilkingtons Glass, Zenford, Small, A.C.I, McPhersons, and countless others, all appear to be dead.

Do you believe that all fourteen of those fifteen major companies were incapable? Shortly to be fifteen out of fifteen?

We now have a relative newcomer, Toyota, with a plant in Altona, which will, in all possibility, be last man standing.

You think the Automotive industry is the only casualty? In the last few months Australia has also shut down the Shell refineries in Sydney and Geelong. Don't even worry about the long-dead fasteners, carpet, textile, shoe, clothing etc. industries - they are as numerous as prayer notes in the Wailing Wall.

It's time to ask the hard question, - is something wrong with Australia?

When I left Ford, in round figures it employed 5,000 at the Geelong site, 6,000 at the Broadmeadows site, 700 in the Sydney plant, and 300 in the Brisbane plant - 12,000 people. That is only the start. Then there are all the outside contractors directly dependent on the Company, we used to estimate this conservatively as about another 33% - 4,000. A straight 16,000 total. Then there is on top of that all the people who serviced those 16,000 - I have no idea how you calculate that, and it is a bit nebulous anyway as the 16,000 are still there, just at a lower level of economic importance.

It is blatantly obvious that our political system just does not work - I have been voicing this for the last thirty odd years. I have no idea what it should be changed to, the basis is sound, but the implementation leaves a lot to be desired. The political intelligence of the bulk of the Australian voting public is heading to absolute zero, and our politicians depend directly on that.

We continue to elect governments time after time on the basis of platforms of promises to be broken. Promises bordering on lies and deceit. We elect governments that have financial abilities that would make Bart Simpson appear genius material.

Just take a quick look at Singapore - about 10% of our population, no natural resources, just about no industry, and yet they have a large network of underground trains running every three minutes everywhere - just on a scale basis alone we should have about ten such systems here in Oz - well at least one in all the capital cities - that leaves the cost of four of them to throw in a decent road system between the capitals. As soon as someone hears that they pop up with "Yes! But look at their social welfare system!"

My answer - exactly - look at it, almost non-existent from the government, the family is the social security system. I have seen our system, which is great in principle, abused right left and centre by those it is meant to protect, what should be a safety net is fast becoming an albatross around our necks. Come hell or high water that system has to be returned to the safety net it was intended to be. I don't know about now, but in Germany it was exactly a safety net and nothing else - if you were out of work you received a percentage of your wage for a period of time (three months? I forget exactly), and then it took a dive to an "emergency payment" which bought food and not much else.

All the government sponsored gifts for new houses, births, carbon tax offsets, GFC handouts etc. are not gifts - they are the currency with which our politicians appear best familiar, in plain English, bribes - bribes for the next election. Time to cut that nonsense - it should never have started.

What is happening in Australia is the failure to recognise the concept of adding value. Build something - make something - repair something - create something - move something - sell something useful - all add value and this is the only thing that creates a healthy economic structure. Add to that the essential services and you are still in business.

Replace that lot with fancy accountants, counsellors, psychologists, dole bludgers, excessive bureaucrats, excessive government, teachers who only put in a fraction of the hours of real workers, and a myriad other similar other sinecure type jobs and you land right in the proverbial can, just like Oz.

Have you ever thought what happens in the next war? You think there won't be one? There have been humans fighting humans ever since one stuck his stone axe in somebody else's skull. You think that is going to miraculously stop? Go talk to the fairies.

What do you think wins wars? Certainly not bureaucrats, counsellors and psychologists - not even servicemen alone. It is pure manufacturing muscle - whoever can build the most missiles, aircraft, bombs, guns etc. and have servicemen to deliver the intended result to the enemy. That is what wins wars. What are we going to build them with now? Do we now let our servicemen down as well?

Have a look back at what Ford Oz built for the last major war. Ford turned out thousands of those huge army transporters, hundreds of those huge landing barges, tracked Bren-gun carriers, Ford blitzes, Bofors guns, and no doubt other things that I have either forgotten or never heard of. The Chrysler plant in Adelaide contributed a similar effort, largely in the aircraft sector.

Who is going to repeat those efforts? Our recent engineering workforce had the ability to tool up a plant like Fords and make virtually anything at the drop of a hat. We made all sorts of odd things that nobody knows about - bits for the aircraft industry, tooling for carbon fibre parts for the French airbus, tooling for those huge Boeing tail spars, blocks for Scalzo engines, right down to microscopic gears for eye surgery instruments. We completed huge tooling contracts for our 'opposition' in the automotive industry.

How wrong we were - the real opposition were those WE put in charge of our own country.

Then there are the unseen things - such as the flow of information and skills from the private sector to the Australian Government excuse for an armaments factory. Probably all but dead by now, but when I was active I attended many meetings at the armaments factory, Monash University, and other venues where engineers from private industry passed on manufacturing engineering related information. Much of it gleaned from first hand international experience, and much of it our own experience.

So that is just a small shot at how our politicians have betrayed us and set Oz up for a right royal shafting. A real enemy could not have done the job better.

You bet your sweet axse I'm sorry.
Robin P.
 

Tasmaniak

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In short, the man raises a lot of interesting points.

Thumpin, where did you find this?
 

Thumpin

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Not sure of the article origin but I just received as spam email at work...

Its a sad story for those who remember!
 

ari666

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id be very interested to see how many jobs there were back in the 60's in:

the stock market
investments
insurance
IT software devt
IT infestructure
IT sales/service
advertising
retail sales
concrete (screeding, prefap, etc)
building in general
heavy equipment operations
mining
tele-communications
tele-marketing
television
radio
media of any kind

im always gonna get hate mail for my opinions, but guys... were crying over a dead-irrelevant-no longer useful indsutry. IM IN IT!!! i know my job has a use by date. jobs change, industry changes, the world changes.

move on.
 

c2105026

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id be very interested to see how many jobs there were back in the 60's in:

the stock market
investments
insurance
IT software devt
IT infestructure
IT sales/service
advertising
retail sales
concrete (screeding, prefap, etc)
building in general
heavy equipment operations
mining
tele-communications
tele-marketing
television
radio
media of any kind

im always gonna get hate mail for my opinions, but guys... were crying over a dead-irrelevant-no longer useful indsutry. IM IN IT!!! i know my job has a use by date. jobs change, industry changes, the world changes.

move on.

I would also argue you cannot really compare us with Singapore. They are quite close to a lot of import/export markets. They also have no mining or agriculture due to the country's small size. We spend huge dollars on infrastructure because we also live very far apart.

Even 20 yrs ago the IT sector didn't really exist. Bottom line is the 60s/70s we had a very protected motor industry, and manufacturing industry. In the 60s we also had as much welfare as we do now. Even perhaps more. The public sector is nowhere near the size it was back then. For example - back in the 60s the DMR (now RTA/RMS) built all its office furniture in house. There was about two times the amount of maintenance/construction depots, and 3 times the number of outdoor staff. ALL projects were developed and delivered inhouse without a middleman getting a cut. The govt had its own printer, govt fleets had their own garages. DMR offices even had their own tea-lady!

Furthermore you'd be surprised how many out-of-school hours even an inept teacher does.......

However I do agree that there is much middle/upper class welfare that can be done away with. First home owner grants did nothing, they just bolstered house prices in the lower end of the market by the requisite amount.
 

ari666

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Even 20 yrs ago the IT sector didn't really exist.

no ****, really? thats kinda my point.

let me rephrase:

in 1947 an ex bomb maker was asked how she felt about the closure of all the arms manufacturers after hilter yielded to the allied forces:

"i think its terrible! we had all these factories making planes, tonnes making bombs and bullets, lots making rifles, the textile industry was booming making tents and uniforms and parachutes, ANY man of weapon-holding age could also have a job!!! now that the war is over everything is closing down! we only have colt, BAE systems and winchester, its just terrible!"

so in the 60's, and early 70's everyone got really fond of buring fossil fuels. a vehicle became an ESSENTIAL form of transport, heavily relied on... then the 80's they got less fond of it cos' they realised it was causing a few environmental problems, what with everyone so hell bent on using it, then the 90's they realised that lots of people were also dying in them so they upped the safety standards (also significantly upping the cost to make one), now in the 2010's people simply cant afford the fuel to go in them, so they are becoming what they should be:

a luxury.



we had a boom, the boom is over, there are other jobs to replace the jobs that have finished.

move on.
 

Thumpin

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Jeez, heavy stuff.
On a lighter note, everyone lives a guided life and memories of the better moments jell hard. Remembering what you live through wouldn't be classed as a rant in my book. Just a personal observation:beer chug:
 
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