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Ralph
Nader
Brian
Trumbore
President/Editor, StocksandNews.com
In light of this week's announcement
that Ralph Nader is once again throwing his hat into
the ring for president, I thought it was a good time
to resurrect a piece I did in November 2000, after
Democrats lit into Nader for his "spoiler" role in
that election. It's too early to know his impact,
if any, this time, and I won't make any predictions
in this space, but nonetheless Mr. Nader has had a
real effect on American life and his story is an interesting
one. What follows is also a tale of how the U.S. auto
industry reacted to change in the 1950s and 60s, as
well as its shoddy treatment of Nader. Well, Ralph
fought back and won.
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Born
in 1934 in Winsted, CT., Ralph Nader was one of four
children of parents who immigrated from Lebanon. The
Naders were civic-minded individuals and the family
restaurant was a source of lots of talk about the
authoritarian "they."
At
an early age, Nader was drawn to the writings of the
classic muckrakers, folks like Lincoln Steffens, Ida
Tarbell, Upton Sinclair, and George Seldes. He read
them all before he was 14. [During this time in my
own life, I was playing Strat-o-Matic Baseball.] What
Nader picked up from these readings was that they
all stopped with exposure. None of the muckrakers
turned their feelings into political movements.
Ralph
eventually found his way to Harvard Law School where
upon completion he hitchhiked down to Washington to
commence his career of public service. His first target
was the U.S. auto industry.
Going
back to the 1920s, the auto makers began to break
away from Henry Ford's philosophy of sticking with
the same model, in the same color, at the same price.
Instead, manufacturers like General Motors changed
models every year to give the impression that there
was something unique that the American consumer needed
to buy. With each year, the cars were made out to
be better than the older ones. This principle would
come to be known as "planned obsolescence," somewhat
akin to today's popular philosophy of "creative destruction,"
though the latter is more a result of technological
change while the former is a result of marketing.
But
changing models constantly required large investments
of capital for design and retooling. Detroit was planting
the seeds of its own destruction if it didn't keep
up with trends amongst the buying public, and it was
increasingly clear that the traditional models were
not built up to the standards that the people demanded.
Populist
Tennessee Senator Estes Kefauver said, "The dictates
of styling engineers take precedence over everything
else. Even safety of operation - not to speak of fuel
economies and problems involved in parking - are subordinated
to the whims of fashion experts."
By
the late 1950s, the Big Three auto makers were losing
out to a public that was demanding smaller, less expensive
cars, and was also increasingly attracted to imports,
especially the Volkswagen Beetle. Imports, in fact,
accounted for 10 percent of all sales in the U.S.,
exceeding 600,000 a year in 1958.
Plus,
it was in the fall of 1958 that a wire story crossed
reporting that two heretofore unknown manufacturers,
Toyota and Nissan, were for the first time shipping
cars to this country.
In
the fall of 1959, the New York Times' Richard Rutter
wrote:
"If
one single factor had to be cited for the public acceptance
of foreign models it would undoubtedly be price. Gasoline
economy, ease of handling, style and just plain novelty
also have been attractions. But a lower-than-expected
American price has furnished the major impetus to
the expansion of the imported-car market."
[To
give you an idea of how much the AMC Rambler, a compact
alternative to the staid Big Three models, meant to
the bottom line, consider this. The company was deep
in the red in the mid- 50s and facing bankruptcy;
then it introduced the Rambler and by 1958 it was
earning $26 million. Another example was Studebaker-Packard,
which lost $13 million in the first half of '58, then
earned $12 million for the comparable period in 1959
with the success of its own compacts.]
So
in 1959 it came as no surprise that the Big Three
introduced 3 smaller models to compete against the
Rambler, Studebaker, and the imports; the Ford Falcon,
Chevrolet Corvair, and the Plymouth Valiant. The European
makers began to see their sales drop for a spell,
but the new cars were still more expensive than the
imports and the quality was equally suspect.
Enter
Ralph Nader. In 1965 he published "Unsafe at Any Speed:
The designed-In Dangers of the American Automobile,"
which called for automobile redesign, specifically
singling out General Motors' Corvair, which he labeled
a death trap due to its poorly designed suspension
system that could cause the driver to lose control
during turns. And Nader wrote of manufacturers in
general, "Probably no other industry in this country
devotes so few of its resources to innovation of its
basic product."
[Foreign
cars didn't escape Nader's microscope either as he
later published a separate report detailing VW's safety
problems.]
For
its part General Motors was shocked that this young,
unknown attorney would attack one of the pillars of
American business. They decided to launch a secret
investigation, delving into Nader's past, as well
as to determine whether he would receive any financial
benefit from all of the lawsuits that would be filed
against GM by angry consumers.
GM
also looked into whether or not this was some kind
of a plot. Nader couldn't possibly be acting alone.
Maybe he was a Communist! They even tried to compromise
him with attractive women, but GM found nothing.
Yet
the story of the automaker's tactics didn't break
until one of the private eyes mixed Nader up with
a Washington Post reporter. An embarrassed General
Motors President James Roche was forced to apologize
before the Senate Subcommittee on Traffic Safety for
spying into Nader's private life. Nader ended up winning
$425,000 for invasion of privacy, which he plowed
right back into his many public interest groups. GM
helped turned Ralph Nader into a star.
Federal
auto safety legislation was introduced in 1966 and
by 1969 sales of the Corvair had slumped some 95%,
with GM then forced to take it off the market.
Nader
went on to tackle insurance companies, the Federal
Trade Commission, AT&T, cereal companies, meat processors,
nuclear power, you name it?Ralph Nader went after
it. He has been called America's Don Quixote, tilting
at windmills, yes, but sometimes knocking them down.
Nader
is behind the Consumer Product Safety Act and the
Freedom of Information Act, as well as safety items
now taken for granted such as seat belts, airbags,
and no-smoking sections; all a result of his action
or the work of his disciples.
Author
Harold Evans perhaps best summed up Ralph Nader's
impact on this nation.
"America
owes more than it may ever realize to Nader and his
Johnny Appleseed research and advocacy groups: Safer
cars, Airbags. Medicines that are safe, effective
and cheaper. Tractors that don't roll over. Scam-free
hearing aids. Decent nursing homes. Fairer credit
and insurance. Cleaner water. Safer factories?Nader
and his groups have played a critical role in all
these changes and thousands more. Nader is not invulnerable
to criticism; he might perhaps too readily assume
all producers are wrong, all consumers right. He has
had his failures and setbacks, and he certainly has
critics, irritated by his piety, and enemies, frightened
by his effectiveness. Yet few have achieved more for
the American citizen than Ralph Nader and his selfless
crusade over the past 35 years."
Sources:
"The
New York Times Century of Business," Floyd Norris
and Christine Bockelmann
"Monopolies in America," Charles Geisst
"The American Century," Harold Evans
"1,000 Years / 1,000 People," Gottlieb and Bowers
Brian
Trumbore
BUYandHOLD
does not recommend any securities. The securities
mentioned above are being used for illustrative and
informational purposes only and should not be regarded
as an offer to sell or as a solicitation of an offer
to buy.
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