Whatever the reason may have been that Ford didn't go under, the fact remains that Ford took control of their own situation that dictated a positive outcome for their destiny --and it didn't involve receiving any money, to stay afloat, at taxpayers expense. They resolved the issue on their own dime. In a similar economic way, many (smart people) refinance their home mortgages all the time. It makes their payments more manageable, takes them less time to pay off their debt and they end up saving thousands of dollars in the end, giving them more discretionary funds to either spend on something else or, if they're really smart, put that extra money into savings or a retirement fund.psquare75 wrote:I always read the ONLY reason Ford didn't go under was they had restructured some debt prior to 2008, in maybe 2005 or so, at much more favorable interest rates, allowing them to avoid the colossal mess. And don't forget, if GM and Chrysler went under, Ford would have as well.
By the same reasoning, IF restructuring their debt is the ONLY reason Ford didn't go under, then it's completely logical to assimilate that both Chevrolet & Chrysler could have also done the exact same thing thus, never involving any of the tax payers dollars to begin with, just like Ford did.
Now that these two companies are 'successful' again, I haven't seen any reimbursement checks from them to compensate the money that was siphoned from my personal paychecks to keep them in business. --In the case of Chrysler, 2009 was not the first time they had received a bailout at the tax payers expense. The time before this last one occurred in 1979. Evidently, Chrysler didn't learn their lesson from 30 years ago. However, I suppose when you know you have a financial backer standing by, you don't have to be responsible for your bad behavior (bad business practices and/or inferior/flawed products). You just hold your hand out and get the money you need to enable you to keep acting irresponsibly. --This again goes back to the consumer should dictate (with their pocketbooks) the winners and losers of business. Not the government.