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Transportation

Report: Boeing 'Put Wall Street First, Safety Second', Creating 'Yearslong Decline of Safety Standards' (seattletimes.com) 231

The Seattle Times has a Pulitzer Prize-winning aerospace journalist named Dominic Gates. Sunday he published an expose on "a yearslong decline of safety standards" at Boeing.

After a 1997 merger, its new executive leaders "treated experienced engineers and machinists as expendable, ignoring the potential damage to Boeing's essential mission of designing and building high-quality airplanes...." The arc of Boeing's fall can be traced back a quarter century, to when its leaders elevated the interests of shareholders above all others, said Richard Aboulafia, industry analyst with AeroDynamic Advisory. "Crush the workers. Share price. Share price. Share price. Financial moves and metrics come first," was Boeing's philosophy, he said. It was, he said, "a ruthless effort to cut costs without any realization of what it could do to capabilities...." Its leaders outsourced work, sold off whole divisions and discarded key capabilities such as developing avionics, machining parts and building fuselages. On the 787, they even outsourced the jet's wings to Japan. They moved work away from Boeing's highly skilled, unionized base in the Puget Sound region. They weakened unions and extorted state government with repeated threats to build future airplanes elsewhere. They squeezed suppliers by demanding price cuts every year that in turn forced the suppliers into ruinous cost-cutting and left them vulnerable to collapse during shocks like the COVID-19 pandemic....

Belatedly, Boeing's current leaders, overwhelmed by criticism, mockery and outrage since January, have finally admitted publicly that some key strategies they pursued for decades were flawed. "Boeing, more than 20 years ago, probably got a little too far ahead of itself on the topic of outsourcing," Chief Financial Officer Brian West said last month. And in January, on CNBC, Boeing Chief Executive Dave Calhoun conceded: "Did it go too far? Yeah, probably did."

Both were speaking about major supplier Spirit AeroSystems of Wichita, Kan., part of Boeing until it was sold off two decades ago, part of a broad divestment of assets to please Wall Street and boost the stock. Following a litany of quality lapses in Wichita, Boeing is now admitting a mistake and trying to buy Spirit back — "for safety and for quality," said West. Another mistake belatedly recognized: With annual bonuses for Boeing's factory managers based largely on meeting cost and schedule targets, it was long a cardinal sin to stop the assembly line. That meant unfinished jobs piled up on aircraft as they moved forward down the line, what Boeing calls "traveled work." Done out of sequence, this work is more difficult and takes much longer. If too much traveled work piles up, it creates chaos. That's what happened in Renton on the 737 assembly line. "For years, we prioritized the movement of the airplane through the factory over getting it done right, and that's got to change," West said. "Once you reduce traveled work, your quality gets better...."

Speaking of how Spirit might be fixed, West said: "It's really about focus and running it, not as a business, as a factory. Run it as a factory and stay focused on safety and quality and stability."

Phil Chandler, a highly skilled Boeing machinist for more than 42 years (retiring in 2020), saw a "dictatorial" approach on the factory floor, according to the article. "Whereas in the past, first-level and even second-level managers in the factory had come up through the ranks as mechanics and had deep knowledge of the work, after [Boeing president Harry] Stonecipher came in those jobs shifted to white-collar people with degrees, often with MBAs."

And a former Boeing physicist also complains about the "shoot-the-messenger" management approach when developing their 787, according to the article: "Engineers who raised technical doubts were told: 'Follow the plan. If you can't do your job, I'll fire you and get someone who can.'"
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Report: Boeing 'Put Wall Street First, Safety Second', Creating 'Yearslong Decline of Safety Standards'

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  • Predictable (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Bert64 ( 520050 ) <bert.slashdot@firenzee@com> on Monday April 08, 2024 @07:39AM (#64377774) Homepage

    Leadership will maximise shareholder value because that's their job, and that's what will earn them bonuses. Long term will be someone else's problem because those who make such decisions will have collected their bonuses and left before there's any fallout.

    The current system is set up to prioritise short term profit above all else, so there was never going to be any other outcome.

    • Re:Predictable (Score:5, Insightful)

      by burtosis ( 1124179 ) on Monday April 08, 2024 @07:43AM (#64377782)

      Leadership will maximise shareholder value because that's their job, and that's what will earn them bonuses. Long term will be someone else's problem because those who make such decisions will have collected their bonuses and left before there's any fallout.

      The current system is set up to prioritise short term profit above all else, so there was never going to be any other outcome.

      100% this^. I’m not even in aerospace and it was shocking to me the level of ignorance present in corporations because of how undervalued competence is. When you think you can just slap the wine bottle from the hand of the guy living outside on the street and put him in a technical position at half the cost it’s amazing anything works at all in this world.

    • Re:Predictable (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Tensor ( 102132 ) on Monday April 08, 2024 @08:42AM (#64377872)

      this is not only in the Airline industry.
      it's happen all over, it's just more visible when a brand new 737 Max 9 falls out of the sky because of this. (or a supposedly bolted down bulkhead door)

      • There's intense focus on each and every quarterly report. There pressure at all times to cut corners, cut labor costs, and even to cheat. Long term company viability is put on the back burner, until the company ends up on the front pages.

        I was at a company trying to go public, but there would always be one quarter out of four that wasn't so good, and the banks would balk. Because our product was bought when customers had the budget, which meant right after their got their annual budget was good, better

        • Re:Predictable (Score:5, Interesting)

          by cusco ( 717999 ) <brian.bixby@gmail . c om> on Monday April 08, 2024 @04:22PM (#64378988)

          I call it "the MBA Disease", they go directly from high school to college and graduate with their shiny new MBA and six figures of debt to manage companies about which they know nothing, never having actually worked a day in their life. This was the key sector of the entire summary, and probably the whole article:

          "Whereas in the past, first-level and even second-level managers in the factory had come up through the ranks as mechanics and had deep knowledge of the work, after [Boeing president Harry] Stonecipher came in those jobs shifted to white-collar people with degrees, often with MBAs."

          Henry Ford even made Edsel work on the assembly line for a year before letting him into management (and apparently whined incessantly about having to pay union dues). That's long gone, now having actually worked for a living is seen as some sort of stain on a prospective manager.

    • Only one thing matters: next quarter's numbers. What happens afterward is somebody else's problem.
    • Yep. Sounds like the same, predictable, well-trodden path of the corporate enshittification process. You know, because it's society's raison de'etre to put the wealth of 0.01% of the population over above everyone & everything else's well-being, right?
    • Re:Predictable (Score:5, Insightful)

      by SimonInOz ( 579741 ) on Monday April 08, 2024 @09:50AM (#64378008)

      We see this in many companies. I have worked in several major banks where they have efficiently outsourced software development, usually to India.
      Considering the most critical part of a bank is its software, you’d think ending up with all the knowledge of said software being with people in another company, another country, and indeed, with people you never meet, this sounds foolish in the extreme.
      But it does save a little money (actually surprisingly little) in the short term.
      It used to be that managers, even owners, of companies knew the business they were in. They were engineers, chemists, or cobblers, perhaps. But now they know “business”. Which often seems to be about cutting costs and boosting the share price. For a while

      • I'm in IT, have worked for two of the 10 largest banks in the U.S. and couldn't disagree more. These Indian teams both here in the U.S. and in India don't "efficiently" do anything, except "kick the can" down the road, further building up technical debt because they want to say "yes" to executives and not only keep their jobs but stay in the country long enough to at least get a green card. There are almost no long term IT employees anymore, the H1-B indian firms have taken over most bank IT. The stuff that
    • A huge part of the drive of this was a stock BuyBacks. Before Reagan stock BuyBacks were against the law because they were an illegal manipulation of the market. They drain companies dry on top of that.

      We need to restore common sense laws. Ban stock BuyBacks. A company shouldn't be able to buy its own stock anymore than a casino should be able to gamble on its own tables.
      • Re: Stock BuyBacks (Score:4, Interesting)

        by alvinrod ( 889928 ) on Monday April 08, 2024 @01:46PM (#64378594)
        Why shouldn't a company be able to buy its own stock back? Offering shares of stock to employees is one method by which companies can compensate employees and to reward them for their own efforts by ensuring that they benefit when the company does well. If a company does issue stock to employees and could not repurchase it, eventually they would run out unless they continuously split the stock.

        A company being able to buy back its own stock doesn't hurt anyone and seems utterly ridiculous given they can acquire the stock of another company to buy it out. The people who have the ultimate authority to decide what should be done with any profit are the very same people who own the stock in the first place. Does it matter if they pay out dividends and the profit is split evenly amongst shareholders or if they buy back the stock allowing any current holders who want to sell the opportunity to do so?

        The only argument against the practice is the potential for price manipulation, but that can be done by companies without buying back their stock and at much greater harm to investors.
    • Cancelling my erroneous mod
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by mspohr ( 589790 )

      Isn't capitalism great!
      Corporations are required to maximize shareholder profit over safety, environment, etc.

      • Yeah, because there's never any market reaction when your company does something stupid and kills hundreds of people. Nope, those stock prices just keep chugging along!

        Except, of course, every single time there's a problem with a Boeing aircraft, they take a huge stock hit, and the management has already announced that they're stepping down because it was "either announce a sunset date or we give you a sunset date of right now" from the board of directors.

        Where does that fit into your thesis?

        • by sjames ( 1099 )

          The problem is the lack of long term investors. The day traders are perfectly fine with it if a company destroys itself as long as the start of that is a nice bump in stock price. They will have sold by the time the results of that announcement result in hundreds of deaths and a long spiral down the toilet.

          The day traders themselves are just an extension of the '80s corporate raiders.

    • I'm pretty sure that making a product that doesn't have parts falling off of it while 12,000 feet above the city you just took off from is part of their job too; as having door plugs blow out of brand new aircraft and having 737s loaded with passengers playing "lawn dart" due to terrible design choices probably doesn't "maximize shareholder value".

      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        It maximized it for a while when they realized all of the savings. Those shareholders sold it off well before the inevitable bad results made themselves known.

        If buying meant you had to hold for a few years, you'd see a much different idea of shareholder value in the boardroom.

    • Almost every preventable foul-up with anything complex I've seen is due to putting short-term concerns over long-term. Maybe start-ups do need "move fast and break things", but transportation and infrastructure CANNOT break without hurting people.

      However, that's water under the bridge. Boeing can't fix itself overnight, it will take a complete review of everything. Boeing will probably bleed money during this restructure, and probably need a bailout from Uncle Sam.

      It's unfortunate we have to bail out greed-

  • by Sique ( 173459 ) on Monday April 08, 2024 @07:49AM (#64377788) Homepage
    Another problem is the way pensions are set up in the U.S.. Most of them are 401k or similar stock market based investment funds. They manage huge amounts of money, they sit at practically all blue chip companies' board of directors, and they demand regular pay-outs for the pensions they have to pay. And because the single retiree has to live by his pension cheque from month to month, they can't afford to have a long term view, because in the long term, all their customers are dead, but until then, they depend on the ability of the pension fund managers to squeeze out the maximum dividend payouts from all companies they are invested in.
    • by Ed Avis ( 5917 ) <ed@membled.com> on Monday April 08, 2024 @07:53AM (#64377798) Homepage
      That seems a little exaggerated. A pension fund has investors who are 30, 40, 50 years old and have many decades before they retire. Those investors want capital appreciation and for there to still be a high quality company to pay out dividends once they retire. Even a retiree aged 70 could live for many more years. The pension funds could certainly take a long term view. The trouble is that nobody really knows what that means. There isn't an easily quotable metric for it as there is for dividends or EBITDA.
      • by Sique ( 173459 ) on Monday April 08, 2024 @08:05AM (#64377818) Homepage
        If you are a pension fund manager, all you know is that 1st of next month, you need X dollars in pay-outs. And this preferably has to come from dividends, otherwise you would have to sell stock or to take a loan, which detoriates your financial base, or you have to find new future pensionists to use their payments for your pay-outs, which would turn your pension fund into a Ponzi scheme. So you better make sure that almost all of the money you need comes from dividends, otherwise you put your pension fund at risk.
      • by XXongo ( 3986865 )

        That seems a little exaggerated. A pension fund has investors who are 30, 40, 50 years old and have many decades before they retire. Those investors want capital appreciation and for there to still be a high quality company to pay out dividends once they retire.

        Turns out to not always be the case.

        The pension fund manager wants to buy a stock that is going up NOW. If whatever it took to make it rise in value now cuts the dividends of the stock in the future, they just sell the stock before that future get here, taking the profit and buying a stock that is going up then.

        • Pension fund managers aren't looking at individual stock issues. They spread the pension fund across several hedge funds in order to diversify. And then those hedge funds manage the actual transactional bit, putting that money where they think it's going to get the best returns, because that's why the pension fund gave them a few hundred million dollars - and if they do better than the other hedge fund traders, then they can sell a bigger piece to the pension fund manager and get a few more hundred millio

          • Nitpick: While hedge funds may be a portion of the investment, more regular funds will generally be the majority of it.

            You invest in the hedge funds in the sense that "hedge" is in the context of "hedge your bet", IE take actions so that the loss won't be as big if you lose. Hedge funds are supposed to do good in declining markets.

            And who says that a pension fund manager with billions to invest can't have their own team?

          • by sjames ( 1099 )

            The indirection makes no difference. It just moves the day trading from the 401K administrator to the hedge fund managers.

    • by DarkOx ( 621550 ) on Monday April 08, 2024 @08:06AM (#64377822) Journal

      Take a giant step back and realize that; they is true of the natural state. You don't even need to have money enter the picture.

      Granpa's bread comes from Junior's effort in the wheat field, he is to old sow and reap. He is living off the dividends of his investment in Junior as youth.

      The traditional defined benefit scheme is really different in terms of incentives as 401k its just leaves pensioners without a such a loud voice at the table because they a relegated to an 'expense' on the balance sheet rather than powerful voting block of share holders. So those incentives are less likely to prevail. We have seen what happens to the those defined benefit plans too; current leadership has a tendency to gamble with the assets needed to make good on them, for use in implementing their own vision, they are after all young enough to move-on if it does not bear fruit.

      Here is a thought - flying is very safe, even flying on a recently build Boeing, statistically speaking. Maybe the safety standard is just higher than what the market is really demanding? Its not like the airlines really could have been unaware, they have a small army of maintenance and inspection people - none of these noticed any changes in QC? Right the airlines kept placing orders, and the public is still buying tickets to fill every seat. Maybe its time to let airlines and manufactures compete on safety and see if passengers will really pay more for a seat on a notionally safer airbus plane..

      • flying is very safe, even flying on a recently build Boeing, statistically speaking. Maybe the safety standard is just higher than what the market is really demanding?

        Well, Boeing is going to find out what the market thinks.

        If a significant number of people will pay extra to avoid flying on Boeing, then that's going to make airline companies want to avoid buying Boeing.

        And if airline companies also see the value of an aging Boeing fleet depreciate noticeable faster than an Airbus fleet, then it's going to make selling Boeing planes at a profit to be more difficult.

        • It's amazing how the TCO figures change when you get sued for a billion dollars because an aircraft you operate had parts fall off of it while in operation, and children almost get sucked out the side 20 minutes after takeoff.

          Even most dipshit MBAs will be able to figure that out with their beloved Excel spreadsheets.

          • My dad was a comptroller before retiring. IE "Management Accountant". He got his work to hire a dedicated safety person by proving that the guy would easily save the company the cost of hiring him through avoided accidents, and then backed it up in subsequent years.

            Of course, dad isn't an MBA, and knows how to spreadsheet properly.

            Accidents are expensive. Best to avoid them.

      • Maybe the safety standard is just higher than what the market is really demanding? Its not like the airlines really could have been unaware, they have a small army of maintenance and inspection people - none of these noticed any changes in QC?

        The QC department doesn't generate any revenue. Chances are it suffered severe budget cuts and whoever is left is too busy or isn't paid enough to care. I predicted that Boeing would either lose the paperwork or it never even existed and I was right. https://www.npr.org/2024/03/09... [npr.org]

        Now there's no one to blame and no one can be punished. Pretty convenient.

    • You get to choose what is in your 401k.

      If you don't want large cap companies, don't include large cap funds in your portfolio.

      There's a reason why they post all the prospectuses on your 401k provider's web site. Go with international funds, mid-market, small cap, ETFs, etc. Stop trying to pass the buck when you have control.

      By the way, if you want to take a principled stand, be aware that your returns may suffer. But that's what being principled requires, rather than just mouthing off on the Internet.

      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        Unfortunately, most people in the workforce barely know what a 401K is or where the money comes from. They just understand that it's for their retirement and take whatever defaults their employer sets.

        That shouldn't be all that surprising. If they understood all of that, they'd be making a lot more money in finance rather than barely more than minimum in retail sales.

  • by Junta ( 36770 ) on Monday April 08, 2024 @07:51AM (#64377794)

    without any realization of what it could do to capabilities....

    More like they wouldn't have cared. In all these cases, the business leaders know that short term, millions of more dollars in their pockets and longer term? Not their problem. Even the executives who catch the hot potato still have a nice payday, and no personal accountability. Being a cheapskate is not a crime and they're compensation is already paid off. Sure the guy stuck holding the bag "loses out" in millions worth of unvested stock, but they console themselves with the millions they made prior to that.

    It is supremely rare for passion for long term viability of a successful business to survive a leadership transition. The people with intrinsic passion for the job are outcompeted by vultures.

    • by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Monday April 08, 2024 @08:36AM (#64377856) Homepage Journal

      It is supremely rare for passion for long term viability of a successful business to survive a leadership transition. The people with intrinsic passion for the job are outcompeted by vultures.

      It's even worse and more immediate than that. The board decided on a direction for the merged company and all of the principled execs (who worked for Boeing) refused and quit, and management of the corporation was taken over by the execs from McDonnell Douglas who as we know from McDD's history have no principles. It was not a long process, it was pretty much all at once.

    • More like they wouldn't have cared. In all these cases, the business leaders know that short term, millions of more dollars in their pockets and longer term? Not their problem. Even the executives who catch the hot potato still have a nice payday, and no personal accountability. Being a cheapskate is not a crime and they're compensation is already paid off. Sure the guy stuck holding the bag "loses out" in millions worth of unvested stock, but they console themselves with the millions they made prior to that.

      It is supremely rare for passion for long term viability of a successful business to survive a leadership transition. The people with intrinsic passion for the job are outcompeted by vultures.

      Would not have been a problem if the majority of the golden parachute or bonuses were paid as a deferred compensation, maybe some in 3 years and some in 5 years time. Or even longer period later. With the lion's share of the payment being the last payment. And part of the deal should be if they screwed up the future of the company, they don't get the deferred compensation. If they don't agree to deferred compensation, they can't be a senior exec in your company cos you can't trust them not to think about t

      • And part of the deal should be if they screwed up the future of the company, they don't get the deferred compensation. If they don't agree to deferred compensation, they can't be a senior exec in your company cos you can't trust them not to think about the company on a long term basis.

        You would have to make that the law because the board does not want long term thinking. They want short term profit. If they wanted long term profit then they could have set direction for the execs that would preserve the company long term. Instead they asked for the opposite, which is how the McDonnell-Douglas execs wound up running the show. And since they have worked for one of the merged corporations for a long time, they would already be vested anyway, and it would not help here even if it was the law.

  • MBA's vs. The Mob (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Spinlock_1977 ( 777598 ) <Spinlock_1977@yah[ ]com ['oo.' in gap]> on Monday April 08, 2024 @08:03AM (#64377814) Journal

    In movies, when the mob takes over a business, they replace the top leader(s), suck all the profits out it, run up the credit cards, and eventually leave a worthless, indebted carcass in their wake. They'll even burn it down to collect the insurance.

    Watching Boeing spiral downwards for the last 20 years has been like watching that mob movie. MBA's took over leadership, drove out the knowledgeable, and hoovered up every dime possible hand over to shareholders, and bonus themselves all the way to the Caymans and back. Is it now a worthless carcass, or worth saving?

    • by Kokuyo ( 549451 )

      The fiction inherent in your story is that there's an ethical difference between MBAs and the mob.

    • by eth1 ( 94901 )

      Watching Boeing spiral downwards for the last 20 years has been like watching that mob movie. MBA's took over leadership, drove out the knowledgeable, and hoovered up every dime possible hand over to shareholders, and bonus themselves all the way to the Caymans and back. Is it now a worthless carcass, or worth saving?

      It's a carcass. They've outsourced almost everything, so they don't really directly produce anything anymore. The engineers are disillusioned, and would probably leave the second they see an opportunity. And they seem to be accumulating liability at an alarming rate. The only things of value they have left are the designs/patents, and their bought regulators and legislators.

      • And the cost to keep the regulators and legislators bought is going to be skyrocketing. As either, it's easy to be "bought" when nothing is rocking the boat. When people are screaming because there's holes in the boat, well, the cost to stay bought increases for them, so they charge more.

  • by blahbooboo ( 839709 ) on Monday April 08, 2024 @08:21AM (#64377832)
    Is there a link to the actual article? I know that Slashdot loves to play hide the article link in their summaries, this time there’s no link to the article
  • Well, of course (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Monday April 08, 2024 @08:30AM (#64377842)

    It's always Wall Street first, customer second. Sure, this time customers die, but otherwise, same deal. As long as it's cheaper to kill off customers than to invest in their safety, this also will not change.

    Human lives only matter if they cut too deeply into profits.

    • It's always Wall Street first, customer second.

      That's only because the executives/board are incentivized through stock options to care about wall street. If their incentives changed, then their priorities would change.

  • by Eunomion ( 8640039 ) on Monday April 08, 2024 @08:38AM (#64377858)
    It should have been broken up for parts very long ago. And if it's not broken up for parts now, we know for a fact this will all happen again, and worse.
    • by XXongo ( 3986865 )

      It should have been broken up for parts very long ago. .

      The opposite happened: Aerospace corporations merged, rather than broke up. All of the aerospace companies today are mergers of a dozen older companies. "Boeing" is actually Boeing-McDonnell-Douglas-Hughes-Rockwell....

      The other aerospace companies as well, of course.

  • by Miles_O'Toole ( 5152533 ) on Monday April 08, 2024 @08:54AM (#64377910)

    I'm afraid it's only a matter of time before real consequences ensue after a plane goes down due to defective parts, or a self-driving car plows through a crowd of children, or some other catastrophe happens because a corporation's upper management chose profits over safety. I do not believe those consequences will be delivered by government or the legal system. Instead, some fairly average dude who lost loved ones will track down the actual decision makers and make them pay.

    I understand this has been the plot for any number of action movies, always involving a hero with superhuman skills and physical gifts. But is that kind of expertise really necessary? Over the whole arc of our civilization we have become more efficient at killing: the body count a single average person can run up has continued to increase. I see no indication this trend is going to change, and we're getting to the point where if a whole yacht club goes into the books as "collateral damage", very few f^cks will be given.

  • ... forced the suppliers into ruinous cost-cutting ...

    The US government needs reckless growth, thus losing quality, happiness and even honesty. That's winner-take-all capitalism and the consequences are more than "Too big to jail". It's a cancer that spreads failure to all manufacturing services: It means; there's no surplus supply, the concentration of wealth, factories and technology eliminates competition, the loss of social values encourages monetary reward for cannibalizing past wealth and for selfishness.

  • by TractorBarry ( 788340 ) on Monday April 08, 2024 @09:32AM (#64377962) Homepage

    Headline might as well be:

    "American business practices put Wall Street first, everything else second, creating years long decline of safety and quality standards."

  • by Chris Mattern ( 191822 ) on Monday April 08, 2024 @09:46AM (#64377998)

    "after [Boeing president Harry] Stonecipher came in those jobs shifted to white-collar people with degrees, often with MBAs."

    Remember that name. He was president of McDonnell-Douglas before the merger. Then he became president of Boeing. He retired in 2005, so he made his wad and got out.

    • Right. He is the guy that ran McD into the ground so it was ripe for a takeover. Then the board made the genius move of putting him in charge of the merged company.
  • by AlanObject ( 3603453 ) on Monday April 08, 2024 @10:20AM (#64378060)

    Here is a prime example of an obvious phenomenon which cause me to largely reject libertarian philosophy even from an early age when I would have been most susceptible. Reading Heinlein novels and such.

    The theory is that consequences will cause businesses to do the "right thing" because otherwise society and the market will turn against them. They will die and be replaced by businesses that will behave knowing their reputation is at stake. It is in their self interest.

    Exhibit Boeing. There is always and I mean always someone with wealth around that is not only willing but eager to trade your long term interests for their short term interests. Slash costs, disregard expensive safety procedures, build stockholder value. Hire lots of MBAs to justify everything. Get the cash. They hang on as for as long as they can because they also get the golden parachute as they are eased out the door.

    Want to sue? Sure go ahead. Here's the number of their $2K/hour attorneys in Manhattan who will tie up the case in "discovery" for about 5 years and come to a settlement that will claw back maybe 15% of what they got. They might or might not notice, being occupied in Barbados with their cool cigarette boat and new trophy mistresses. So much for "self interest."

    • I believe you have confused capitalism with corporatism.

      Granted, corporatism is indeed what capitalism can deform into in the absence of rule of law (which would hold decisionmakers absolutely accountable for avoidable deaths, injuries, and other losses caused by their decisions).

    • Boss sold his company to a Japanese company. We were a bit uneasy at first. What would happen. Then posters were hung up. Achieve value through creativity. Was one of the slogans. Then we all had to watch a video. A poor quality control issue resulted in a fire killing a few people. The entire issue was explained. CEO and upper management publicly apologized, including a long and deep bow. Every employee from the on had to see that video. We really started to like these guys. In the end all went well. Talke
  • by hdyoung ( 5182939 ) on Monday April 08, 2024 @10:22AM (#64378066)
    Check this actual data out:

    http://www.airsafe.com/events/... [airsafe.com]

    The 737 max doesn’t look great in comparison, but it’s not exactly like they’re falling out of the sky everyday. And it’s the most popular commercial jet, ever (I think). And it’s new, which means that the craft could plausibly get more reliable over time. Look up “bathtub reliability curve”. Personally I’d fly on any commercial jet that’s currently cleared for flight. Especially if the alternative is to drive a long distance. The roadways are a literal bloodbath in comparison.

    For the people who are griping that Boeing is capitalist, my response is “boo hoo”. If you think capitalism is bad, go ahead and fly on Russian-built aircraft. Or North-Korean airlines. It’s capitalism or the alternatives, and the alternatives absolutely suuuuuucccckkkkkkkkkk.

    But it does seem that maybe they’ve allowed quality to lapse too much, which is a problem in this particular industry. Apple thrived after Jobs died, partly because the next leader still had engineering chops and was a supply-chain guy. MBAs and accountants are important, but so are the technical experts. Time for Boeing to rebalance their leadership and restructure their operations, I think. Better sooner than later.
    • Check this actual data out:

      http://www.airsafe.com/events/... [airsafe.com]

      The 737 max doesn’t look great in comparison, but it’s not exactly like they’re falling out of the sky everyday. And it’s the most popular commercial jet, ever (I think). And it’s new, which means that the craft could plausibly get more reliable over time.

      Air plane crashes are rare enough that fatalities are a poor way to judge quality (or even safety). I mean they literally forgot to bolt a door in and that still counted for zero fatalities.

      For the people who are griping that Boeing is capitalist, my response is “boo hoo”. If you think capitalism is bad, go ahead and fly on Russian-built aircraft. Or North-Korean airlines. It’s capitalism or the alternatives, and the alternatives absolutely suuuuuucccckkkkkkkkkk.

      The problem isn't that Boeing is capitalist, the problem it's run by MBAs who are practising a bastardized form of stock market capitalism. The trouble with the stock market is even sophisticated investors are fairly low information. They can't tell if those cost savings are from efficiency or cutting corners, so you nee

    • by Quila ( 201335 )

      Many crashes are maintenance related. This issue is about quality control at the factory. And the MAX isn't very new. It is just a slightly modified 737 with new engines (which is related to one reason they were crashing). I wouldn't have a problem flying on a 737 built before the McDonnell Douglas managers took over Boeing. It became the most popular commercial jet back when it was a great and reliable jet.

  • When it comes to government regulation that's law enforcement meaning cops. But we call them bureaucrats instead. That's not an accident it makes us think of them differently and it makes it easy to prevent law enforcement against corporations.

    Imagine if we had as many TV shows about the law enforcement that protects you from Wall Street as we do about the ones that arrest shoplifters...
  • by bkmoore ( 1910118 ) on Monday April 08, 2024 @10:51AM (#64378140)
    By replacing career professional engineers and aircraft mechanics with an array of outside temporary contractors, Boeing has jettisoned most of their institutional knowledge. In business, there's no value placed on institutional knowledge, it's pretty much assumed all work is fungible, and an outside contractor would do the same quality work as someone with 20 or 30 years of experience designing or building airplanes. In my experience working at Boeing back in the 1990s, outside contractors tended to be narrowly focused in their own little silo, and lacked any solid understanding of the big picture. But when you're building or designing aircraft, you really need to appreciate the big picture, since an aircraft is a complex set of systems and subsystems that all interact with each other. Unfortunately, I have seen no indication that Boeing is seriously rethinking their contractor-centric business model, or taking steps to rebuild lost institutional knowledge. To do that, management would have to make Boeing a great place to work again, put employees back in the drivers seat by making long-term careers attractive with both pay and career progression, and put employee experience and expertise ahead of maximizing profits. That is why when people say, "they never should have built the 737 Max, but instead built a clean-sheet aircraft", I say Boeing has largely forgotten how to design aircraft, and any new clean-sheet design would also require a huge learning curve, that wouldn't have been needed in the past.
  • The CEO David L. Calhoun has left the company with a $33 million salary for last year. The article in the local paper was unkind to the company. This is the first time I can remember that the local news has had anything bad to say about the company. It was an interesting read on the mind set of the executives and the influence Jack Welch, GE's former CEO, had on them and the way the company was run.
  • by Charlotte ( 16886 ) on Monday April 08, 2024 @11:11AM (#64378188)

    How fucking difficult can it be to provide a link to the article?

  • ....they're a canary in the coal mine for ALL American manufacturing businesses I'm acquainted with.

    I've been in industrial logistics for coming up on 35 years now and this is 100% the example of pretty much every AA or AAA company I've dealt with, including corporate elements of my own firm. Boeing maybe was slightly more aggressive (or the results of their shitty, short term strategies are unfortunately vastly more consequential and obvious).

    Would love to see some sort of contract clause for senior manag

  • We used to be patient, companies like GE, Union Pacific, and Boeing were good long-term investments. Now it's "What did you do last quarter."

    This puts us on a losing trajectory favoring large institutional investors who sit on boards yelling for profits.

  • by HamidPayaamAbbasi ( 7143815 ) on Monday April 08, 2024 @01:20PM (#64378528)
    As the Americans complain about external "threats" they totally ignore their own failings. The fall of the US empire will not be by Russian election interference, it will be their own short sightedness, lack of long term planning and complete disregard for the working class that hollowed out all their institutions leaving a bloated corpse with no interior behind. No lessons will be learned from Boeing and the US will continue to be hollowed out by private equity and Americans them selves all while screaming "Russia! China! Iran" Sad.

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