As America moved into the "Roaring
Twenties", the automobile became an important part of the every citizen's
life. The car became more affordable for the people with the average income.
Automobile production figures rose from two million in 1920 to five and a half
in 1929. By the late twenties a point was reached at which it was possible to
move the entire population of the United States by road at one time, since
there was close to one motor vehicle for every five people. Thus the car was no
longer a luxury, but a useful and necessary item of the household.
There are two factors that made this
possible. First - the price drop on the cars, which reached its lowest point in
1926, when a Model T (one of the first Ford's cars) could be bought for $290.
Secondly there was a liberal access to the credit for both consumers and
dealers. The big companies such as General Motors and Ford went into financing
of sales on a big scale. The result was that by 1925 three-fourths of all sales
of motor vehicles, new and used, were made on time-payment plans.
Motor-vehicle
manufacturing was by then the largest industry in the country and was still
growing rapidly. Employment in the automobile factories was a quarter of a
million in 1922 and in excess of the 400,000 in 1929; the amount of paid wages
doubled from $400 millions to $800 millions. It also had a great effect on
other industries: highway construction, retail, repair and gas services. These
industries employed about the 1,2 million people. The motor vehicle was now
consuming annually 90% of the country's petroleum products, 80% of the rubber,
20% of steel, 75% of the plate glass, and 25% of the machine tools.
Of
course all this automobelization of a such huge country as USA required
reorganization of a whole highway system in order to provide motorists with
usable ways of transportation. In 1916 the Congress passed the Road Aid Act by
which all state governments were required to have a highway department to keep
state roads in order. But new Federal Highway Act of 1921 went even further by
providing states with the federal help in maintaining of the roads of the
federal importance (about 7% of the non-urban road mileage in each state) on a
fifty-fifty matching basis. Initially about two hundred thousand miles of trunk
highways received federal support. In order to justify these expenses Oregon's
state government used simple and apparently painless method of taxing the sale
of gasoline in an amount of one cent per gallon. Ten years later every state
had gasoline tax, and the average had risen to three cents per gallon.
During this time the automobile industry
was undergoing fundamental changes in structure. The day, when the individual
with technical skills and a garage could start a motor company like in the
beginning of the century, was gone. In order to gain the mass market the
company had to have a tremendous capital, great manufacturing facilities and
widespread network of dealerships. Thus during this time the so-called Big
Three consolidate about three-fourth of the market, leaving the remaining 25%
to about 50 other companies. So this Big Three consisted of Ford, General
Motors and Chrysler.
Ford
Motor Company.
At the beginning of the boom period of
1920's, Ford's leading position was unchallenged and seemingly unchallengeable;
in 1921 the Ford Motor Company made three-fifth of all the motor vehicles
manufactured in the United States. But soon General Motors moved it from this
position.
Henry Ford (the founder of the Ford Motor
Company) contributed a lot to his own defeat. He stubbornly refused to see that
the assembly line (his innovation) and the Model T (his first car) were merely
a step in the progress of the automobile and not the culminating stage. The
problem with Tin Lizzies (Model T) was that they were produced almost unchanged
from their prototype of 1908. Henry Ford obviously missed the fact that more
attractive and more comfortable cars appeared on the market, and low price
(Model T was the cheapest one) wasn't a solution to everything. The price from
now on became just one, but not the only one, of the criteria for the
consumer's decision.
On May 31st, 1927 the last Model T (No.
15,007,003) rolled off the assembly line and all Ford manufacturing operations
came to a prolonged halt. This was the result of final realization of the
inevitable Ford was loosing to the General Motors, and it needed something new.
For about a year and a half Ford was keeping silence, but finally he came out
with the Model A. Although it was a good car, and in its first year it outsold
General Motor's Chevrolet, but it wasn't significantly different from its
competitors and certainly not superior to them. Thus in spite of all Ford's
effort his company would remain on its second place till nowadays.
General
Motors Company.
General Motors was founded by William C.
Durant in 1908. General Motors was the
major Ford's competitor and was able to
defeat Ford's Company not only due to the Ford's mistakes but also because of
Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., one of the greatest organizing geniuses in the American
industry. After Durant bought Sloan's business, which was pretty successful,
Sloan came to work for General Motors too. Soon he was promoted to vice
president and became president of the General Motors in 1923.
In 1920 General Motors began to experience
big troubles with quality control and sales. William Durant was forced out of
his job and Pierre Samuel DuPont took his place. Sloan was in charge of
operations at the time. He had to reorganize the whole company because
management team was unorganized. Few different lines of cars were produced:
Chevrolet, Oldsmobile, Buick, Cadillac, Pontiac, La Salle, and more. None of
them had production planning but they all competed among each other. Only Buick
and Cadillac were known for quality. Company had no inventory control.
When Sloan familiarized himself with the
mess in the company, he realized what the company could be if it was organized.
He noticed few main advantages over Ford: General Motors had variety of cars
when Ford only had Model T in production, also GM's car were in different price
ranges. GM started making cars with 4, 6, and 8 cylinders. He established
inventory control, and discontinued any line of cars which wasn't popular with
consumers. Also he formed a policy of annual model changes to attract
customers. Also he set up advertisements and banquets to help him sell cars.
In 1921 General Motors sold 457,000 cars
and their profit was 61 million dollars. Next year 800,000 cars were sold and
profit was 80 million dollars. President DuPont was so pleased that he retired
and named Sloan the president of General Motors. In 1929 the profit of General
Motors was 248 million dollars with 1.9 million cars sold. During the Great
Depression sales dropped by a lot but General Motors still made a huge profit
compared to all the other companies because the company so organized under
Sloan that it was able to adapt fast to any major market change.
When
Alfred Sloan took charge of the General Motors, company was a mess and was on
the edge of collapse. Alfred Sloan basically made General Motors the company
that became first on the market and kept that position .
Chrysler.
At the next level below Ford and General
Motors, when the 1920's began, was a group of apparently well-established
companies with some potential: Hudson
(including Essex), Studebaker, Dodge, Maxwell (later Chrysler),
Willys-Overland, Nash, Packard, and Durant Motors. From these only Chrysler
emerged to form what became one of the
Big Three of American automobiledom.
This was the result of a conscious
decision on Chrysler's part, along with an ability to grasp opportunities. He
was aware that, despite its promising start, the Chrysler Corporation would be
a minor and possibly short-lived member of the automotive world unless it could get established in the mass market.
But the manufacturing resources were too limited to enable Chrysler to produce
a low-priced car competitively, and the company still lacked the financial
strength to build a new plant on the scale that would be required. The solution
to the problem was found when the Dodge Brothers Manufacturing Company was put
on the market in 1928. John and Horace Dodge had been victims of the influenza
epidemic that followed the First World War, and their heirs subsequently
decided to get out of the automobile business.
Consequently, after some dickering Dodge
was absorbed by the Chrysler organization. The assets received by Chrysler were
just what he needed: a first-class manufacturing plant with a well-equipped
foundry and other facilities for large-scale production; a car with a
well-known name and an established position in the medium-priced market; and a
dealer network some twelve thousand strong that could be used as an outlet for
other Chrysler products. The Dodge sales organization was considered to be one
of the best in the country, and Chrysler's autobiography makes it clear that he
wanted the Dodge dealers as much as the Dodge manufacturing capacity. With
these resources at his command Chrysler was able to introduce the Plymouth in
1928, a step neatly timed to take advantage of Henry Ford's temporary
disappearance from the mass market.
With the rise of Chrysler the developing
structure of the American automobile industry became clearly appreciable. At
the top were General Motors and Ford, between them outproducing the rest of the
industry put together. Both were also international automotive powers. Ford had
established manufacturing subsidiaries in Europe before the First World War and
had regional assembly plants throughout the world. General Motors bought the
British Vauxhall and the German Opel companies during the 1920's. Chrysler was
well behind the leaders but definitely ahead of the rest of the field.
The
total effect of the motor vehicle on American life has still to be measured, if
indeed such measurement is even possible. Certainly the automobile brought
major social changes, and some of these were becoming evident with the
widespread extension of car ownership in the 1920's. It would be an
exaggeration to say that the automobile made Americans a mobile people; the
people who made their way across the American continent while the motorcar was
still a dream were far from static. It would be more accurate to say that an
already mobile people was given the means to travel farther, faster, and more
freely.
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