Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

SoylentNews is people

posted by martyb on Sunday January 26 2020, @06:43AM   Printer-friendly
from the Oh,-what-a-tangled-web-we-weave-when-first-we-practise-to-deceive!-(Marmion) dept.

Boeing's promised 737 Max production halt begins:

The airline manufacturer had announced last month it would stop making the troubled craft at least until it was no longer grounded, but hadn't set a date. However the line has officially stopped producing planes while Boeing officials wait for regulators to give it the OK to fly again.

[...] The latest update estimated the grounding would last through at least mid-2020, Boeing said in a statement Tuesday.

Boeing will reassign 3,000 workers after 737 MAX production halt

Boeing Co said it will reassign 3,000 workers to other jobs as it halts production of the grounded best-selling 737 MAX jet in mid-January.

The announcement came after American Airlines Group Inc and Mexico's Aeromexico disclosed they were the latest carriers to reach settlements with Boeing over losses resulting from the grounding of the 737 MAX aircraft.

Neither airline disclosed the compensation. A number of airlines have struck confidential settlements with Boeing in recent weeks. Boeing said it does not comment on discussions with airlines.

Boeing's biggest supplier lays off 2,800 workers because of 737 Max production suspension:

Spirit AeroSystems (SPR), which makes fuselages for the Max as well as other items for Boeing, announced Friday that it is furloughing approximately 2,800 workers. Shares of the Wichita, Kansas-based company fell more than 1% in trading.
"The difficult decision announced today is a necessary step given the uncertainty related to both the timing for resuming 737 Max production and the overall production levels that can be expected following the production suspension," Spirit AeroSystems CEO Tom Gentile said in a press release.

Boeing wants to resume 737 Max production months before regulators sign off on the planes:

Boeing's new CEO, Dave Calhoun, said Wednesday that he wants the company to resume production of the 737 Max months before regulators sign off on the planes and airlines prepare to return them to service.

[...] The 737 Max production shutdown has already cost thousands of jobs and raised concerns about the crisis' impact on the broader economy.

But Calhoun's comments indicate the company does not expect the production pause to last more than a few months.

"We got to get that line started up again," he said on a conference call with reporters. "And the supply chain will be reinvigorated even before that."

Trump calls Boeing 'a very disappointing company' as 737 Max crisis grows:

"Very disappointing company," Trump told CNBC's Joe Kernen in an interview when asked about Boeing's new timeline. "This is one of the greatest companies of the world, let's say, as of a year ago and all of a sudden things happened."

Previously:

737 Max "Designed by Clowns"; Boeing Suppliers Affected by Production Suspension
DoJ Criminal Investigation: Boeing Test Pilot Lawyers Up, Takes the 5th
Boeing CEO Fired
Pressure on FAA to Approve its 737 Max Jets Backfires for Boeing
Boeing Will Temporarily Stop Making its 737 Max Jetliners
Boeing's 737 Max Troubles Deepen, Taking Airlines, Suppliers With It
Review of 737 Max Certification Finds Fault With Boeing and F.A.A.
American Airlines Says It Will Resume Flights With Boeing’s 737 Max Jets in January
AP Sources: Boeing Changing 737 Max Software to Use 2 Computers
Boeing Falsified Records for 787 Jet Sold to Air Canada
Boeing Pledges $100M to Families of 737 Max Crash Victims
Capt. 'Sully' Sullenberger and Boeing 737 Max News
Ralph Nader: Engineers Often the First to Notice Waste, Fraud and Safety Issues
Boeing’s Own Test Pilots Lacked Key Details Of 737 Max Flight-Control System
Boeing CEO Defends 737 Max Flight Control System
Analysis: Why FAA-Approved Emergency Procedures Failed to Save ET302
Initial Findings Put Boeing's Software at Center of Ethiopian 737 Crash
Southwest Airlines Boeing 737 Max Flight Makes Emergency Landing (While Carrying No Passengers)
Airline Cancels $4.9 Billion Boeing 737 MAX Order; Doomed Planes Lacked Optional Safety Features
Pilot Who Hitched a Ride Saved Lion Air 737 Day Before Deadly Crash
DoJ Issues Subpoenas in 737 Max Investigation
Boeing 737 Max Aircraft Grounded in the U.S. and Dozens of Other Countries
Second 737 MAX8 Airplane Crash Reinforces Speculation on Flying System Problems
Boeing 737 MAX 8 Could Enable $69 Trans-Atlantic Flights
Boeing Unveils Fourth Generation 737, Turns Two Production Lines into Three

Original Submission

 
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
Display Options Threshold/Breakthrough Mark All as Read Mark All as Unread
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday January 26 2020, @08:50AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday January 26 2020, @08:50AM (#948803)

    If there are other companies to take up the slack then yes, this would be an example of Capitalism and the free market at work.

    Where the problem comes in is that Boeing is the only aircraft manufacturer large enough on the entire continent to support those workers. All the other manufacturers put together probably couldn't use 1/5 of those workers, which means this ruins the economy having cascade effects on other industries both obvious and not so obvious. In a properly functioning free market economy there would be enough competing vendors of aircraft to absorb a small number of those employees immediately and within a year or two absorb the rest as demand for aircraft shift from Boeing's failing business to their smaller but safer competitors who in turn would either have the preorders to expand on their own or have the investment interest to recieve capital to expand their production using the best of the excess Boeing/Spirit Aerosystems employees (Or Spirit itself wouldn't be laying people off because they would simply shift fuselage production to one of the many other competitors now in demand for more of them.)

    Instead thanks to regulatory capture and pork barrel funding by the military-industrial complex, Boeing has gotten to spend too long resting on its laurels became too big thanks to mergers and acquisitions and has finally begun its implosion, which in a free market would lead to it collapsing into a much smaller entity, being absorbed, or dissolving completely. But in the current economy will no doubt result in a bailout costing the taxpayers and the economy untold billions and not solving the underlying problem with a company of that size, scope, or apathy towards the safety and quality of their products.

    It's not that America can't be better. It's that America won't be better. Because why should you pay an honest day's wage if you don't have to? And why would you do an honest day's work if you're watching the boss pocket all your blood, sweat and tears, ready to discard you at the first sign of a loss in profit?