Originally posted by Toad
All of you union bashers conveniently ignore the fact that the Japanese factories in the US are paying the employees essentially the same wage as the US automakers. In one case, Toyo is paying the same UAW wage at the Fremont plant.
It's not wages; the Japanese pay about the same wages to screw a car together here as the the US companies pay.
The legacy retirement benefits are the issue. These are benefits that the car companies AGREED TO PAY in the future in return for work DONE IN THE PAST. In short, these benefits were already paid for by the workers.
These legacy costs are what make the difference between what workers cost.
If Toyo or Nissan in the US promises retirement benefits to their workers, in 40-50 years these costs will be having the same effect on them.
It's always easy when you are the new guy with none of the associated costs of longevity. However, no one gets to be the new guy forever.
Actually in a current Forbes article Toyota, Honda, Nissan hourly workers wages including benafits is quite a bit below the big 3:
According to Forbes:
Labor cost per hour, wages and benefits for hourly workers, 2006.
Ford: $70.51 ($141,020 per year)
GM: $73.26 ($146,520 per year)
Chrysler: $75.86 ($151,720 per year)
Toyota, Honda, Nissan (in U.S.): $48.00 ($96,000 per year)
According to AAUP and IES, the average annual compensation for a college professor in 2006 was $92,973 (average salary nationally of $73,207 + 27% benefits).
Bottom Line: The average UAW worker with a high school degree earns 57.6% more compensation than the average university professor with a Ph.D. (see graph above, click to enlarge), and 52.6% more than the average worker at Toyota, Honda or Nissan.
Many industry analysts say the Detroit Three, and especially Ford, must be on par with Toyota and Honda to survive. This year's contract, they say, must be "transformational" in reducing pension and health care costs.
What would "transformational" mean? One way to think about: "transformational" would mean that UAW workers, most with a high school degree, would have to accept compensation equal to that of the average university professor with a Ph.D.