- Feb 24, 2013
- 45,365
- 37,747
- AFL Club
- Hawthorn
- Other Teams
- Man Utd Green Bay Melb Storm
- Banned
- #26
'Sayonara '.
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Unless you were Toyota, who saw it as a matter of pride that their Australian factory ran at a profit and wanted it to continue, but were unable to support the industry on their own.
Take out the Ford Ranger sales and Ford in Australia are not much better than Holden/GM.
Top 10 selling cars in Australia – January 2020
Holden snuck into 10th for overall marque sales. Looking at the models people buy now, why would you choose the current Holden equivalent? You wouldn't, and most people don't.
- Toyota Hilux
- Ford Ranger
- Toyota Corolla
- Toyota RAV4
- Mitsubishi Triton
- Huyundai i30
- Mazda CX-5
- Kia Cerato
- Nissan X-Trail
- Mazda3
Holden were exporting both vehicles and engines not that long ago. The RWD Zeta platform and Alloytec V6 motor were part of GMs global plans in the mid 2000s.
Australia has always been a bit of an odd fit in the global car game. Domestic market is small, our labour is expensive and we aren't known as technology leaders. With the LHD/RHD difference from us to the US and the distance between the two countries sharing components across a platform was always going to be problematic. Toyota had a small advantage that at least Japan and Australia both use RHD cars.
Take out the Ford Ranger sales and Ford in Australia are not much better than Holden/GM.
With a bit of inventiveness I think Holden (and Ford Australia) would've been fine, because our classic cars actually fit the American market well, and they should've been creating other models more suited to the Australian market. But post-GFC GM and Ford both became more territorial and less interested in what their Australian outposts had to offer - especially in the case of GM - and that was that.
The US unions stopped any meaningful importing to their home market. It's actually written in there union agreements. So much for free trade.With a bit of inventiveness I think Holden (and Ford Australia) would've been fine, because our classic cars actually fit the American market well, and they should've been creating other models more suited to the Australian market. But post-GFC GM and Ford both became more territorial and less interested in what their Australian outposts had to offer - especially in the case of GM - and that was that.
To be brutally honest, when Holden stopped making cars in Australia, what even was Holden anymore? It lost its identity and specialness. It's no longer the Australian car, the car made for us, just the badge that an American congolmerate slaps on its cars when they ship the cars here.
Australian manufacturing WAS Holden. Now that local production is gone, the brand is empty and meaningless.
Does that mean Ford "wins" the age old contest?
5,915 Commodores sold in 2019, 49th on the list. How many of those are Fleet vehicles rather than privately owned?
High costs have seen Commodores, Falcons and Magnas (380s) phased out of Fleets over the past decade and until then, that kept these artificially afloat.
Manufacturing has been dead here for 20+ years, just propped up by Government Funded Life Support in the name of ego
Supercars is a parody now.
The whole Project Blueprint parity regulations were designed to turn it into Falcon vs Commodore stock car racing. Popularity waned so they opened it up a bit so Volvo and Nissan and Mercedes could join in. They've all left.
Now it's a two door American coupe vs a front wheel drive Opel made in Germanu. LOL. Who is it going to be next year, Mustang vs Camaro?
I don't think the appetite for touring car racing minus Holden and Ford is particularly high.
Ford vs Chevrolet at Bathurst
Manufacturing things in your own country is about more than ego.
Not in this case
Industry was propped up by Import Tariffs then Subsidies
Never by investment in technology that would make cars cheaper or better
Car manufacturing was on its way out decades ago and would have gone sooner without the Tariffs/Subsidies