Downtown Celina today

Downtown Celina today

Whether you favor  Donald Trump or not, his assessment of the damage our trade policies with China have created in our own country are spot on. Here's just one story of one company in one Ohio town and how we allowed China, via Walmart to change our history. There are many more stories just like this.

Walk into any department store and you'll find over 95% of the products are made in China or another Asian country. Most dollars Americans earn and spend result in our supporting other countries. Only our politicians can create trade policies and corporate tax structures that reverse this trend.

Whether we elect a Trump, a Bush, a Clinton, or a Sanders they are all going to have to address and correct this problem if we are to get this country back on track.

Here's the Celina, Ohio and Huffy story with excerpts from Wikipedia:

"Huffy Bicycles had manufacturing and assembly facilities in Azusa, California (closed in the late 1970s), and Ponca City Oklahoma (closed in the early 1980s), but largely manufactured most of their bicycles in Celina, Ohio, and at one time was Celina's largest employer. At their peak, the bicycle division manufactured over two million bicycles per year and were the free world's largest bike company.

By the mid 1990s, Huffy was in deep financial trouble. The U.S. Bicycle industry had consolidated, sharply reducing the number of channels for selling bikes. High-volume retailers had claimed three fourths of the U.S. market, gaining tremendous leverage over bicycle makers. Wal Mart in particular was pressuring Huffy: it ordered 900,000 bikes at one time, but insisted that Huffy lower its prices significantly. To remain a major player in the bicycle market, the Ohio company had little choice but to agree. Even with Huffy's other non-unionized manufacturing plants, it could not make a profit selling bicycles at the prices Wal Mart, its biggest customer, was willing to pay. After requesting and getting a pay cut for its unionized workforce in Ohio, Huffy returned to profitability for two years only to again crumple under the pricing pressure applied by Wal Mart. This forced Huffy to close its Celina, Ohio plant and lay off all 935 employees. Their other two factories in Missouri and Mississippi soon fell to the same fate for the same reason. Even after subcontracting production to China,where plant workers earned only 25 to 41 cents per hour, it remained unable to operate at a profit.

Between 1994 and 1998, comparable retail bike prices dropped 25 percent in the United States largely because of the wave of foreign imports, plunging ten percent in 1997 alone.In 1996, the Huffy bicycle division received a major blow when U.S. courts ruled that surging imports of low-cost, mass-market bicycles from China did not pose a 'material threat' to the last three major U.S. bicycle manufacturers - Murray Inc., Roadmaster, and Huffy.[12]

In 1997 nearly 60 percent of the bikes purchased in the United States were produced by foreign manufacturers who incurred significantly lower production costs than U.S. manufacturers.

Huffy closed its Celina, Ohio plant in 1998,[13] and quickly thereafter closed two smaller bicycle manufacturing plants (in Farmington, MO. and Southhaven, MS.) which had been opened as a last-ditch effort to avoid the higher union manufacturing costs in Ohio. After it became apparent that continued U.S. production of low-cost, mass-market bicycles was no longer viable, Huffy had bicycles built by plants in Mexico and China, starting in 1999.[14] The relationship with the Mexican plant was severed in 1999. In federal banktruptcy court in Dayton, Ohio, in 2004, Huffy's assets were turned over to its Chinese creditors. After years of struggling against the cut-rate Chinese bicycles that set the price target guiding Wal Mart, Huffy essentially had become a Chinese-owned company.[15]Crown Equipment Corporation now uses the former Huffy U.S. bicycle factory in Celina, Ohio, to produce forklifts."

...Here's a noteworthy prophetic post from a Huffy discussion board from 2005. 

07-27-2005, 01:42 PM#7GregSY Diamond

Here's an old saying I want you all to mull over for a while - "You can decide to enter into a relationship with an 800lb. gorilla - but he'll be the one who decides when to end it"
Am I full of crap? Let's make a bet - print this out, staple it to your wall, and tell me who's right and who's wrong once ten years have passed.
It's a bet I don't want to win - but I will. (end of post)

...I guess GregSY won that bet! 

 

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