Years ago, back when I was a small child in the 1950's, America
revolved around manufacturing. My father and most of the people my parents knew
had some type of factory job. When I was working my way through college I
worked summers at Ford Motor Company. Almost
no one I met, back then, worked in the financial or service industries. Over
the past several decades times and conditions have changed.
Today manufacturing makes up a third of the overall economy
of our country. The bulk of jobs are in the financial and service industries.
This shrinkage has resulted in a loss of clout for manufacturers in Washington.
Politicians only remember manufacturers and those they employ during
presidential elections. Every four years
you have the spectacle of wealthy men, from both national parties, taking off
their expensive ties and rolling up their designer shirts to shake hands with
factory workers and discuss their problems. After the votes are counted, those
workers and factory owners slip back into obscurity until the next election
when all politicians claim to be the friend of the working man.
Here at Zycon, we contact and speak to manufacturers every
day. Most of those manufacturers we speak with are doing surprisingly well.
Their chief concern is not orders or business but whether or not they can rely
upon their bank to get financing for orders, as they come in. Most of them are also surprised at the double
standard employed by the President and the Congress when it comes to dealing
with Manufacturers and Financial Institutions.
The election is less than a month old. In that month, we have seen the financial
institutions of America
crumble under their own greed and mismanagement, caused by their shilling for
unstable pyramid schemes involving Collateralized Debt Securities. We have also seen these same institutions go
begging to Congress for a bailout.
Surprisingly they got the initial bailout and now Citicorp has gotten another
huge bailout. Most of these bailouts are
with out any strings attached and no guarantees of benefit to the public, such
as a promise to ease mortgage foreclosures or to ease the credit markets.
At the same time we have seen the Auto Industry go to
Congress and be deliberately humiliated by that Congress. Our Congress has asked the Auto Manufacturers
to jump through artificial hoops and spell out a detailed plan of how every
penny the Congress may give them is to be spent. They must also promise never ever, ever to
make a product marketing mistake in the future, and also improve the gas
mileage for their cars. The Congress
conveniently forgets that the reason the Auto Industry is in trouble is that
there is no available credit for the average auto buyer. This Congress has
failed to address the reason they presented as justification of that bailout of
the Financial Industry, the drying up of the credit markets.
We believe there is another reason for the financial bailout
that is more pragmatic to the Congress. That reason is their personal
investments and those of their friends.
Over the past several years, investments in financial stocks and
securities have become a common place occurrence among the investing class of America. Investment in manufacturing has become very
un-glamorous. Financials are the darling
of the elite classes of America,
and we believe that is where their money is. This would explain the mad dash to
save the inept Financial Institutions while demanding that Manufacturers not
bother our busy Congress and just go through Bankruptcy. Members of Congress should disclose their
current investments in any Financial Institutions before they allow these
unregulated bail outs of the Financial Industry to continue. It would only be
fair to those manufacturers who now find themselves jumping frantically through
Congressional Hoops.