Jester
Veteran
Today's Daily Ticker guest Bob Lutz has nearly 50 years of experience in the auto industry. Most of that career was spent with Ford and General Motors, from which he retired in 2010 as the vice chairman. Known as an outspoken, straight-shooting executive, Lutz is also an unabashed car lover. Now in retirement, Lutz is still as vocal as ever about cars and the auto industry. In his new book, Car Guys versus Bean Counters: The Battle for the Soul of American Business, Lutz documents what he believes was the greatest factor in the demise of the U.S. auto industry.
Actually, that topic and premise was written 25 years ago by the late, great author, David Halberstam's brilliantly written, "The Reckoning". Halberstam demonstrated his admiration for "car guys" and destain for accountants, in particular, those who played accounting games in order to provide false (yet legal) means to report higher income.
One example, was that in order to show an artificially higher profit was to over-produce cars, which could not be sold, and the large number of cars produced reduced the per unit Cost-of-Goods-Sold, as an expense recognized only at the time a car was actually sold. Therefore, cars for which there was not enough demand to sell were parked in vast open fields by the tens of thousands, and allowed to rust away, as they were never sold, and eventually scrapped and written-off. Of course, producing those cars were not free, but the expense did not show themselves on the books until years later as those cars would appear as "inventory" on the balance sheet.
If one is into these type of books, then "The Reckoning" would a great read.
So Reviews Jester.