Fiat makes final payment to US gov't for Chrysler bailout

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topsemag55

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#1 topsemag55
Member since 2007 • 19063 Posts
WASHINGTON - The Treasury Department said Thursday it has exited its investment in Chrysler LLC after Italian automaker Fiat SpA purchased the U.S. government's remaining holdings in the auto company. Fiat paid $560 million to the Treasury Department for the government's 98,000 shares. Fiat has run the company since it emerged from bankruptcy protection in June 2009. $11.2 billion (out of 12.5 billion) of the assistance has been repaid, Treasury says. Treasury said it likely won't recover the remaining $1.3 billion. Chrysler has made a remarkable turnaround from two years ago, when it was rescued by the government. Story here.
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deactivated-5f9e3c6a83e51

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#2 deactivated-5f9e3c6a83e51
Member since 2004 • 57548 Posts

Hopefully FIAT will do a better job than Daimler. They just ran it into the ground.

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deactivated-6127ced9bcba0

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#3 deactivated-6127ced9bcba0
Member since 2006 • 31700 Posts

Should have just let it tank.

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deactivated-59d151f079814

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#4 deactivated-59d151f079814
Member since 2003 • 47239 Posts

Should have just let it tank.

airshocker

:| That would be great logic.. Let a business that tanked leading to a even greater economic diseaster in Michigan along with even more people out of work.. Instead of bailing them out in which they fully pay back two years later along with the business being stable..

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YellowOneKinobi

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#5 YellowOneKinobi
Member since 2011 • 4128 Posts

Have to look into this a little bit, but my first thought is why are we forfeiting 1.3 billion exactly?

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CaveJohnson1

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#6 CaveJohnson1
Member since 2011 • 1714 Posts

[QUOTE="airshocker"]

Should have just let it tank.

sSubZerOo

:| That would be great logic.. Let a business that tanked leading to a even greater economic diseaster in Michigan along with even more people out of work.. Instead of bailing them out in which they fully pay back two years later along with the business being stable..

Who cares about the economy? pish, let the corp tank and workers lose their jobs.

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chessmaster1989

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#7 chessmaster1989
Member since 2008 • 30203 Posts

Have to look into this a little bit, but my first thought is why are we forfeiting 1.3 billion exactly?

YellowOneKinobi
Yes I'm wondering that as well. That said at the relatively small price tag of 1 billion, I'd say this was a worthwhile investment.
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DJ_Lae

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#8 DJ_Lae
Member since 2002 • 42748 Posts
Ahh. That explains why I'm seeing so many Fiat 500s at the local Dodge dealer. I wondered why they chose them of all automakers (still don't really know why they'd bother saving them, it's not as if they're worth it).
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YellowOneKinobi

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#9 YellowOneKinobi
Member since 2011 • 4128 Posts

[QUOTE="YellowOneKinobi"]

Have to look into this a little bit, but my first thought is why are we forfeiting 1.3 billion exactly?

chessmaster1989

Yes I'm wondering that as well. That said at the relatively small price tag of 1 billion, I'd say this was a worthwhile investment.

I guess it's like if I lend you $100. Then you pay me back $90. Then my wife asks if you ever paid me back. I just say "Yes, dear."........ because I just forfeit the money you still owe so I have bragging rites to say I got my money back. :p

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deactivated-59d151f079814

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#10 deactivated-59d151f079814
Member since 2003 • 47239 Posts

[QUOTE="chessmaster1989"][QUOTE="YellowOneKinobi"]

Have to look into this a little bit, but my first thought is why are we forfeiting 1.3 billion exactly?

YellowOneKinobi

Yes I'm wondering that as well. That said at the relatively small price tag of 1 billion, I'd say this was a worthwhile investment.

I guess it's like if I lend you $100. Then you pay me back $90. Then my wife asks if you ever paid me back. I just say "Yes, dear."........ because I just forfeit the money you still owe so I have bragging rites to say I got my money back. :p

Well you could argue that tax revenue genratedbecause of them still existing will make up that difference easily given enough time than them just not existing.

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YellowOneKinobi

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#11 YellowOneKinobi
Member since 2011 • 4128 Posts

WASHINGTON - The Treasury Department said Thursday it has exited its investment in Chrysler LLC after Italian automaker Fiat SpA purchased the U.S. government's remaining holdings in the auto company. Fiat paid $560 million to the Treasury Department for the government's 98,000 shares. Fiat has run the company since it emerged from bankruptcy protection in June 2009. $11.2 billion (out of 12.5 billion) of the assistance has been repaid, Treasury says. Treasury said it likely won't recover the remaining $1.3 billion. Chrysler has made a remarkable turnaround from two years ago, when it was rescued by the government. Story here.topsemag55
:lol: Oh what a difference a headline makes :lol:

Same story..... except this one reads "US Loses $1.3 Billion in Exiting Chrysler"

:lol:

Misleading Subject Line is Misleading

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YellowOneKinobi

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#12 YellowOneKinobi
Member since 2011 • 4128 Posts

[QUOTE="YellowOneKinobi"]

[QUOTE="chessmaster1989"] Yes I'm wondering that as well. That said at the relatively small price tag of 1 billion, I'd say this was a worthwhile investment.sSubZerOo

I guess it's like if I lend you $100. Then you pay me back $90. Then my wife asks if you ever paid me back. I just say "Yes, dear."........ because I just forfeit the money you still owe so I have bragging rites to say I got my money back. :p

Well you could argue that tax revenue genratedbecause of them still existing will make up that difference easily given enough time than them just not existing.

I could also say that by convincing my boss to hire me an assistant that I "created or saved" one million jobs. (Because technically I created one and nobody can prove one way or another if I 'saved' the other 999,999 jobs)

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topsemag55

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#13 topsemag55
Member since 2007 • 19063 Posts
[QUOTE="YellowOneKinobi"]

Have to look into this a little bit, but my first thought is why are we forfeiting 1.3 billion exactly?

chessmaster1989
Yes I'm wondering that as well. That said at the relatively small price tag of 1 billion, I'd say this was a worthwhile investment.

What I'm thinking is Fiat paid for those shares at the current market price (just like anyone else buying shares would), but the total price was less than what the government had loaned in the bailout.
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surrealnumber5

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#14 surrealnumber5
Member since 2008 • 23044 Posts

should have been liquidated, we might have had a whole new car company if they had been.

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topsemag55

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#15 topsemag55
Member since 2007 • 19063 Posts
Misleading Subject Line is MisleadingYellowOneKinobi
You're wrong - read the first line of the article I linked, gov't exiting means the final payment was made. So basically you're telling me you have little knowledge of how stock purchases and sales are done.:P
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YellowOneKinobi

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#16 YellowOneKinobi
Member since 2011 • 4128 Posts

[QUOTE="YellowOneKinobi"]Misleading Subject Line is Misleadingtopsemag55
You're wrong - read the first line of the article I linked, gov't exiting means the final payment was made. So basically you're telling me you have little knowledge of how stock purchases and sales are done.:P

Final payment will never be made.

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topsemag55

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#17 topsemag55
Member since 2007 • 19063 Posts

[QUOTE="topsemag55"][QUOTE="YellowOneKinobi"]Misleading Subject Line is MisleadingYellowOneKinobi

You're wrong - read the first line of the article I linked, gov't exiting means the final payment was made. So basically you're telling me you have little knowledge of how stock purchases and sales are done.:P

Final payment will never be made.

Wrong again - the US gov't does not own any more shares of Chrysler LLC - it's out of the picture, Fiat has > 50% control of the company now.
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YellowOneKinobi

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#18 YellowOneKinobi
Member since 2011 • 4128 Posts

[QUOTE="YellowOneKinobi"]

[QUOTE="topsemag55"] You're wrong - read the first line of the article I linked, gov't exiting means the final payment was made. So basically you're telling me you have little knowledge of how stock purchases and sales are done.:Ptopsemag55

Final payment will never be made.

Wrong again - the US gov't does not own any more shares of Chrysler LLC - it's out of the picture, Fiat has > 50% control of the company now.

Never paid back the full amount owed, regardless of any accounting tricks.

It's funny how many people (not you topsemag55) like go after 'Fat Cats' for "playing games" with the tax code and loop-holes, unless it's something that paints their political 'side' in a good light.

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BMD004

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#19 BMD004
Member since 2010 • 5883 Posts

[QUOTE="airshocker"]

Should have just let it tank.

sSubZerOo

:| That would be great logic.. Let a business that tanked leading to a even greater economic diseaster in Michigan along with even more people out of work.. Instead of bailing them out in which they fully pay back two years later along with the business being stable..

Why would you want to keep a failing company afloat?

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CaveJohnson1

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#20 CaveJohnson1
Member since 2011 • 1714 Posts

[QUOTE="sSubZerOo"]

[QUOTE="airshocker"]

Should have just let it tank.

BMD004

:| That would be great logic.. Let a business that tanked leading to a even greater economic diseaster in Michigan along with even more people out of work.. Instead of bailing them out in which they fully pay back two years later along with the business being stable..

Why would you want to keep a failing company afloat?

Cause it helps the economy through taxes and employs thousands and thousands of people.

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YellowOneKinobi

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#21 YellowOneKinobi
Member since 2011 • 4128 Posts

[QUOTE="sSubZerOo"]

[QUOTE="airshocker"]

BMD004

Why would you want to keep a failing company afloat?

We like to reward bad behavior/poor decision making in this country, you know that. :P

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BMD004

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#22 BMD004
Member since 2010 • 5883 Posts

[QUOTE="BMD004"]

[QUOTE="sSubZerOo"]

:| That would be great logic.. Let a business that tanked leading to a even greater economic diseaster in Michigan along with even more people out of work.. Instead of bailing them out in which they fully pay back two years later along with the business being stable..

CaveJohnson1

Why would you want to keep a failing company afloat?

Cause it helps the economy through taxes and employs thousands and thousands of people.

How does keeping businesses who don't make enough money to sustain itself good for the economy?
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CaveJohnson1

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#23 CaveJohnson1
Member since 2011 • 1714 Posts

[QUOTE="CaveJohnson1"]

[QUOTE="BMD004"]Why would you want to keep a failing company afloat?

BMD004

Cause it helps the economy through taxes and employs thousands and thousands of people.

How does keeping businesses who don't make enough money to sustain itself good for the economy?

It just paid back it's money owed. So now it provides jobs, tech and taxes, those all help the economy.

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BMD004

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#24 BMD004
Member since 2010 • 5883 Posts

[QUOTE="BMD004"][QUOTE="CaveJohnson1"]Cause it helps the economy through taxes and employs thousands and thousands of people.

CaveJohnson1

How does keeping businesses who don't make enough money to sustain itself good for the economy?

It just paid back it's money owed. So now it provides jobs, tech and taxes, those all help the economy.

It paid back the government with another loan.
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topsemag55

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#25 topsemag55
Member since 2007 • 19063 Posts

[QUOTE="topsemag55"][QUOTE="YellowOneKinobi"]Final payment will never be made.

YellowOneKinobi

Wrong again - the US gov't does not own any more shares of Chrysler LLC - it's out of the picture, Fiat has > 50% control of the company now.

Never paid back the full amount owed, regardless of any accounting tricks.

It's funny how many people (not you topsemag55) like go after 'Fat Cats' for "playing games" with the tax code and loop-holes, unless it's something that paints their political 'side' in a good light.

What "accounting tricks"?:? Fiat didn't tell the US, "Give me those 98,000 shares and right now.":lol: The government of its own choice decided to sell their remaining shares to Fiat at the current market price - their choice, not Fiat's. The only choice Fiat had was to say no to the proffered sale (and that's if they even could, which probably they could not). Haven't you heard, we needed that $560 million - we're flat broke.:lol:
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deactivated-6127ced9bcba0

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#26 deactivated-6127ced9bcba0
Member since 2006 • 31700 Posts

:| That would be great logic.. Let a business that tanked leading to a even greater economic diseaster in Michigan along with even more people out of work.. Instead of bailing them out in which they fully pay back two years later along with the business being stable..

sSubZerOo

It is great logic. Whatever happens as a result of them tanking is immaterial. They got themselves into the mess, they should have gotten themselves out.

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deactivated-6127ced9bcba0

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#27 deactivated-6127ced9bcba0
Member since 2006 • 31700 Posts

Cause it helps the economy through taxes and employs thousands and thousands of people.

CaveJohnson1

With taxpayer money that essentially makes the company worthless.

I don't want nationalized jobs, or government jobs. I want private sector jobs created solely by profit.

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topsemag55

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#28 topsemag55
Member since 2007 • 19063 Posts

[QUOTE="sSubZerOo"]

:| That would be great logic.. Let a business that tanked leading to a even greater economic diseaster in Michigan along with even more people out of work.. Instead of bailing them out in which they fully pay back two years later along with the business being stable..

airshocker

It is great logic. Whatever happens as a result of them tanking is immaterial. They got themselves into the mess, they should have gotten themselves out.

One good thing to come out of it was Chrysler got out from under Daimler-Benz, who cared a lot more about Mercedes than the US.
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Oleg_Huzwog

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#29 Oleg_Huzwog
Member since 2007 • 21885 Posts

Not too long ago, an uncle of mine had to close his small business. About 20 people lost their jobs. Why did his tax dollars keep another failing company afloat? Where was his bailout? Why couldn't he get a lump sum on an equivalent per-person basis? Chrysler employs what... around 50,000 people? $12.5 billion comes out to around $250k per employee. Based on that approximation, why couldn't he get a check for $5 million to keep his business running?

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CaveJohnson1

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#31 CaveJohnson1
Member since 2011 • 1714 Posts

Not too long ago, an uncle of mine had to close his small business. About 20 people lost their jobs. Why did his tax dollars keep another failing company afloat? Where was his bailout? Why couldn't he get a lump sum on an equivalent per-person basis? Chrysler employs what... around 50,000 people? $12.5 billion comes out to around $250k per employee. Based on that approximation, why couldn't he get a check for $5 million to keep his business running?

Oleg_Huzwog

To be fair, maybe he should have been helped...

but car development and their manufacturing are very very very expensive.

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CaveJohnson1

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#32 CaveJohnson1
Member since 2011 • 1714 Posts

[QUOTE="CaveJohnson1"]

[QUOTE="BMD004"]How does keeping businesses who don't make enough money to sustain itself good for the economy?BMD004

It just paid back it's money owed. So now it provides jobs, tech and taxes, those all help the economy.

It paid back the government with another loan.

no???

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BMD004

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#33 BMD004
Member since 2010 • 5883 Posts

[QUOTE="airshocker"]

[QUOTE="CaveJohnson1"]

Cause it helps the economy through taxes and employs thousands and thousands of people.

CaveJohnson1

With taxpayer money that essentially makes the company worthless.

I don't want nationalized jobs, or government jobs. I want private sector jobs created solely by profit.

That's what we have now. Gov't intervention saved the company and thousands of jobs, and probably the michigan economy. The gov't even got paid back. The government did exactly what it should have done in economic intervention.

herp derp

Where did the government get the money to pay for that bailout?

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BMD004

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#34 BMD004
Member since 2010 • 5883 Posts

[QUOTE="BMD004"][QUOTE="CaveJohnson1"]It just paid back it's money owed. So now it provides jobs, tech and taxes, those all help the economy.

CaveJohnson1

It paid back the government with another loan.

no???

Umm... yes.

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topsemag55

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#35 topsemag55
Member since 2007 • 19063 Posts

Not too long ago, an uncle of mine had to close his small business. About 20 people lost their jobs. Why did his tax dollars keep another failing company afloat? Where was his bailout? Why couldn't he get a lump sum on an equivalent per-person basis? Chrysler employs what... around 50,000 people? $12.5 billion comes out to around $250k per employee. Based on that approximation, why couldn't he get a check for $5 million to keep his business running?

Oleg_Huzwog
You're right, it isn't equitable at all. The outcome of the recession might have been vastly different had the gov't decided to save small businesses instead. But they didn't save all of them - just the ones related to whom they bailed out, such as machining businesses, parts manufacturers, materials suppliers (glass, vinyl, plastic, rubber)
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#36 SpartanMSU
Member since 2009 • 3440 Posts

I think I'm going to ask the Federal government for a $10 billion loan in order to keep my hole digging business alive. If they don't, thousands of jobs will be lost. We have to put people to work.

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deactivated-6127ced9bcba0

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#37 deactivated-6127ced9bcba0
Member since 2006 • 31700 Posts

That's what we have now. Gov't intervention saved the company and thousands of jobs, and probably the michigan economy. The gov't even got paid back. The government did exactly what it should have done in economic intervention.

herp derp

CaveJohnson1

No, the government shouldn't be intervening in the economy to that extent at all. It's crony-capitalism at it's finest. Where is the bailouts for small business owners?

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CaveJohnson1

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#38 CaveJohnson1
Member since 2011 • 1714 Posts

[QUOTE="CaveJohnson1"]

[QUOTE="BMD004"]It paid back the government with another loan.BMD004

no???

Umm... yes.

I was implying me being confused.

I thought it a strait payment.

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BMD004

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#39 BMD004
Member since 2010 • 5883 Posts

I think I'm going to ask the Federal government for a $10 billion loan in order to keep my hole digging business alive. If they don't, thousands of jobs will be lost. We have to put people to work.

SpartanMSU
I'd like to invest in this magnificent business venture.
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#40 CaveJohnson1
Member since 2011 • 1714 Posts

[QUOTE="CaveJohnson1"]

That's what we have now. Gov't intervention saved the company and thousands of jobs, and probably the michigan economy. The gov't even got paid back. The government did exactly what it should have done in economic intervention.

herp derp

airshocker

No, the government shouldn't be intervening in the economy to that extent at all. It's crony-capitalism at it's finest. Where is the bailouts for small business owners?

Not even when it works, saves the company, the loan is paid back and it saves 50,000 workers joba?

IDK, maybe that should be looked into.

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#41 Netherscourge
Member since 2003 • 16364 Posts

Have to look into this a little bit, but my first thought is why are we forfeiting 1.3 billion exactly?

YellowOneKinobi

Probably because some of the companies folded?

Also, was the cash-for-clunkers plan part of that money too?

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BMD004

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#42 BMD004
Member since 2010 • 5883 Posts

[QUOTE="airshocker"]

[QUOTE="CaveJohnson1"]

That's what we have now. Gov't intervention saved the company and thousands of jobs, and probably the michigan economy. The gov't even got paid back. The government did exactly what it should have done in economic intervention.

herp derp

CaveJohnson1

No, the government shouldn't be intervening in the economy to that extent at all. It's crony-capitalism at it's finest. Where is the bailouts for small business owners?

Not even when it works, saves the company, the loan is paid back and it saves 50,000 workers joba?

IDK, maybe that should be looked into.

Like SpartanMSU said... why not just pay people to dig holes? It keeps them employed...

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CaveJohnson1

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#43 CaveJohnson1
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[QUOTE="CaveJohnson1"]

[QUOTE="airshocker"]

No, the government shouldn't be intervening in the economy to that extent at all. It's crony-capitalism at it's finest. Where is the bailouts for small business owners?

BMD004

Not even when it works, saves the company, the loan is paid back and it saves 50,000 workers joba?

IDK, maybe that should be looked into.

Like SpartanMSU said... why not just pay people to dig holes? It keeps them employed...

Car companies produce a product, and indirectly are helping to employ hundreds others of other people indirectly.

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deactivated-6127ced9bcba0

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#44 deactivated-6127ced9bcba0
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Not even when it works, saves the company, the loan is paid back and it saves 50,000 workers joba?

IDK, maybe that should be looked into.

CaveJohnson1

Not even. This is why we have bankruptcy laws.

I don't like the precedent it sets. If Uncle Sam will bailout any big company because it made bad business decisions, what incentive do they have for making good decisions?

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topsemag55

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#45 topsemag55
Member since 2007 • 19063 Posts

[QUOTE="CaveJohnson1"]

[QUOTE="airshocker"]

No, the government shouldn't be intervening in the economy to that extent at all. It's crony-capitalism at it's finest. Where is the bailouts for small business owners?

BMD004

Not even when it works, saves the company, the loan is paid back and it saves 50,000 workers joba?

IDK, maybe that should be looked into.

Like SpartanMSU said... why not just pay people to dig holes? It keeps them employed...

Stimulus should've been used for that, shovel-ready you know.:lol:
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Netherscourge

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#46 Netherscourge
Member since 2003 • 16364 Posts

[QUOTE="CaveJohnson1"]

[QUOTE="airshocker"]

No, the government shouldn't be intervening in the economy to that extent at all. It's crony-capitalism at it's finest. Where is the bailouts for small business owners?

BMD004

Not even when it works, saves the company, the loan is paid back and it saves 50,000 workers joba?

IDK, maybe that should be looked into.

Like SpartanMSU said... why not just pay people to dig holes? It keeps them employed...

You can't sell holes?

EDIT: In before "That's what She said."

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CaveJohnson1

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#47 CaveJohnson1
Member since 2011 • 1714 Posts

I think I'm going to ask the Federal government for a $10 billion loan in order to keep my hole digging business alive. If they don't, thousands of jobs will be lost. We have to put people to work.

SpartanMSU

I have a real hard time believing that you live in michigan or went to state. It's easier to understand somebodies perspective that doesn't live in this state, but unless you've been wearing blinders your whole life, it's hard to believe that you don't have at least a partial understanding of the problems that would be caused by one of the big three failing.

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topsemag55

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#48 topsemag55
Member since 2007 • 19063 Posts
You can't sell holes?Netherscourge
:lol::lol: Seems to me you've purchased a hole if a company digs one for your mailbox or your gaslight.:o
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BMD004

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#49 BMD004
Member since 2010 • 5883 Posts

[QUOTE="BMD004"]

[QUOTE="CaveJohnson1"]Not even when it works, saves the company, the loan is paid back and it saves 50,000 workers joba?

IDK, maybe that should be looked into.

Netherscourge

Like SpartanMSU said... why not just pay people to dig holes? It keeps them employed...

You can't sell holes?

EDIT: In before "That's what She said."

And if you are constantly losing money as a company, and being artificially kept afloat, then it's pretty much the same thing, isn't it?

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CaveJohnson1

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#50 CaveJohnson1
Member since 2011 • 1714 Posts

[QUOTE="CaveJohnson1"]

Not even when it works, saves the company, the loan is paid back and it saves 50,000 workers joba?

IDK, maybe that should be looked into.

airshocker

Not even. This is why we have bankruptcy laws.

I don't like the precedent it sets. If Uncle Sam will bailout any big company because it made bad business decisions, what incentive do they have for making good decisions?

The insentive would be money, exects at chrysler and GM were paid next to nothing when this loan came out, one exect was literrally paid 1 dollar for the year. Just because they were helped doesn't mean that they haven't had extreme money pains as a result of bad decisions.