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Re: O/T New car cost with today's gas prices


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Posted by dhermesc on March 13, 2008 at 12:04:58 from (24.248.193.103):

In Reply to: Re: O/T New car cost with today's gas prices posted by Mike M on March 13, 2008 at 11:46:48:

"You got to look real hard at that domestic content ( now called North American content ) as GM has figured Canada and Mexico in their figures."


Ford does the same - especially the Mexican content.

I also notice that "site" freely switches back and fourth between numbers and precentages - and lump all "foreign" cars into one group including those that have no manufacturing plants in the US.

For a more impartial view check here:

http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB114731076341249773-vC7NDlPLXotsdDHpLbpm5Ewbo9E_20060610.html?mod=tff_article


I was surprised to learn this though:

"Few sports cars have captured the nation's imagination like the sleek Ford Mustang, a 21st-century reincarnation of an American classic. The Toyota Sienna minivan, by contrast, speaks to the utilitarian aesthetics of Japan: refined interiors, arm rests and lots and lots of cup holders.

Yet, by a crucial measure, the Sienna is far more American than the Mustang. Statistics from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration that were publicized in "Auto Industry Update: 2006," a presentation by Farmington Hills, Mich., research company CSM Worldwide, show only 65% of the content of a Ford Mustang comes from the U.S. or Canada. Ford Motor Co. buys the rest of the Mustang's parts abroad. By contrast, the Sienna, sold by Japan's Toyota Motor Corp., is assembled in Indiana with 90% local components."


Sell your Ford and buy a Toyota if you want to keep Americans working.

"Measuring local content is extremely difficult because a part made in America can be assembled from smaller parts, some of which might come from abroad. All of which underscores how the line between what is and isn't American, at least in the auto industry, is "going to be increasingly difficult to pinpoint" as car makers become increasingly international and produce more in local markets, says Michael Robinet, a vice president at CSM Worldwide."


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