Posts Tagged: Henry Ford


20
Dec 10

The Dignity of Work

Then:  Bosses and Workers

During a tour of his new automated plant, a famous exchange took place between auto maker Henry Ford and Walter Reuther, president of the United Auto Workers:

Ford: “Well, Walter, how are you going to get these machines to pay union dues?”

Reuther: “But Henry, how are you going to get them to buy cars?” Quotes

One of my college jobs was working for my university’s Labor Education Center.  Many of the faculty members were ex-UAW officials.  These men had witnessed the bloody organizing campaigns at Ford and other manufacturers.   After law school and clerkship my first associate’s job was with a small law firm representing unions. I confess to a bit of a soft spot for the old time labor unions that looked out for the welfare of the working man.  Unfortunately, in their current incarnation unions deliver less protection to workers, and arrogate more power unto themselves.

The director and senior professor of the Labor Education Center began as a factory worker, became a union organizer and earned a doctorate.  He was dedicated to the education of workers and union leaders.   A valuable lesson he taught was the simple dignity of work, regardless of status, pay or title.  A working person possessed a quiet and mostly unsung nobility:  producing a decent day’s labor, supporting a family, being a role model for his or her children, contributing to community.

I remember once being in the hallway of the Labor Education Center chatting with another student intern.  A janitor was cleaning the hallway. The director, by this time my valued mentor, walked up to me and said, “if you cannot help this hardworking janitor, at least get out of his way.”

Now:  The Reality of Unemployment

The most recent new claim number for unemployment is 427,000.   Despite the media spin of an improving job market, this still connotes a troubling and recessionary employment level.   Missing from the media coverage is that 893,000 workers moved into the extended unemployment coverage category.   In Who’s Lying, James Quinn deconstructs the government’s employment statistics:

The number of Americans employed over the last few years is as follows:   2007 – 146.0 million,  2008 – 145.5 million,   2009 – 139.9 million,  2010 – 138.9 million.

It seems there are 7.1 million less employed people than there were three years ago. Contrary to the spin from the White House, there are 1 million less people employed today than during the horrific 2009 year.  Luckily, another 6 million people left the work force, or we’d really have a problem. The truth is that if the government actually counted everyone in the country who wants a job, the unemployment rate is not 9.8%, but 23% and it continues to rise. Who’s Lying, See also Shadow Government Statistics.

Losing Our Way

In the employment arena America has lost its way.  We have focused on short term profits to the detriment of the long term welfare of our society.  Outsourcing and layoffs have been the means to achieve short term performance.

Corporate human resource departments once protected and educated their employees.  In the modern world human resource departments view employees as adversaries: costly, demanding and ungrateful.  Few employees today believe corporate sloganeering that employees make the key competitive difference in the marketplace.

Government policy is less than supportive of hiring.  The morass of workplace rules, tax policy that favors off shoring and outsourcing, and expensive health care mandates are all disincentives to hiring.

An effective 23% unemployment rate denotes a troubled and unfair society.

We have forgotten the simple dignity of work.  Even worse, we have forgotten how to respect the simple and mostly unsung work of others.  The Reuther-Ford conversation resonates today:  if we keep laying everyone off, who will buy our cars?

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19
Feb 10

A Reputation as Good as Goldman Part II

In A Reputation as Good as Goldman Part I, we examined Goldman’s role in exacerbating the housing market collapse, AIG’s demise, and the Greek government debt crisis.  These major stories were the subject of separate front page articles in the New York Times. Mentors had always warned me no to be too clever by half, a lesson Goldman perhaps missed.   Are the Goldman stories symptomatic of behavior for the last ten years on Wall Street?  Was this always the way Wall Street firms and Goldman behaved?

Sydney Weinberg

In 1930, Sydney Weinberg became the head of Goldman Sachs. He ran the firm for the next 39 years.  By 2010 standards, he was an unlikely person for the job. He had left school at 15 (1907) and started at the struggling brokerage firm as a janitor’s assistant.  He then served in the Navy during World War I, returned to the firm and ultimately became co-head of the securities trading group. He is credited with saving Goldman Sachs from bankruptcy during the Depression. See Annals of Business: The Uses of Adversity by Malcolm Gladwell

In 1956, Weinberg managed his greatest corporate coup. Goldman Sachs was selected to handle for the Ford Motor Company the enormously difficult, largest ever until that time, initial public offering.  The effort took two years. The most fascinating part of the transaction was Weinberg’s fee:

When Henry Ford had asked Weinberg at the outset what his fee would be, Weinberg had declined to get specific; he offered to work for a dollar a year until everything was over and then let the family decide what his efforts were really worth.  Far more than the actual fee, Weinberg always said he appreciated an affectionate, handwritten letter he received from Ford which says, along with other flattering things, “Without you, it could not have been accomplished.” Weinberg had the letter framed and hung in his office, where he would proudly direct visitors’ attention to it, saying: “That’s the big payoff as far as I am concerned…” The fee finally paid was estimated at the time to be as high as a million dollars. The actual fee was nowhere near that amount: For two years’ work and a dazzling success, the indispensable man was paid only $250,000. Deeply disappointed, Sidney Weinberg never mentioned the amount.  See The Partnership: The Making of Goldman Sachs by Charles D. Ellis.

Weinberg understood the value of a continuing relationship with Ford Motor Company and was soon appointed to their board.  Moreover, for nearly a half century, Goldman became the chief investment bank for Ford which vaulted the firm into the top tier of Wall Street firms.  To Sydney Weinberg reputation was everything.

Tradition and the Making of a Culture

John Weinberg followed his father Sidney as head of the firm.  The younger Weinberg preserved his father’s ethic and corporate culture.

Once upon a time, Goldman Sachs shunned publicity.  During the period from 1930 to 1969, Sydney Weinberg ran Goldman Sachs where he developed a staunch corporate cultural aversion to publicity.  During the 1970s, a tandem of John Weinberg and John Whitehead assumed the reigns of leadership at Goldman Sachs.  Whitehead left the company in 1984 to enter public life.  John Weinberg carried on in the same vein as his father Sydney – shunning publicity – to the point where he hired a man to keep his name and his firm’s out of the press.  He kept him off the full-time payroll (though he sat full-time at a desk in head office) so that if, improbably, a comment did slip out, it could be honestly dismissed as not coming from a Goldman Sachs employee.  John Weinberg served as sole senior partner and chairman until 1990.  His mantra was to put the client’s interests first and he wouldn’t allow Goldman to be involved in (sic) hostile takeovers. See All Roads Lead to Goldman Sachs.

As a young law student, Ben Stein interviewed with John Weinberg.  He was impressed with Weinberg as a “smart guy,” but also surmised that he inherited the position from his father, Sydney Weinberg:

But what I did not know about John Weinberg was that even though he was rich and well connected, as a young man he joined the Marines to fight the Japanese in the Pacific, then fought again in Korea. That was America’s ruling class then. The scions of the rich went off to fight. See Looking for the Will Beyond the Battlefield

Clearly, John Weinberg believed that honor and service to one’s country mattered.  But in the current Goldman and Wall Street culture, going off to serve one’s country is for the common folk: why do that and miss out on so many deals and great bonuses?

What Changed?

The end of the Weinbergs’ era can be traced to several factors.  First, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and other large investment firms were partnerships.  This means the partners were investing their personal fortunes.  Moreover, retained capital was extremely important to the future success of the business.  Thus, there was a limit on executive compensation based on capital and personal preservation.  Second, as firms went public, it was easier to convince a less involved board of directors (rather than partners) to pay large bonuses to executives. Third, those same executives became increasingly greedy, and probed and trampled ethical boundaries. Short-term thinking reigned on Wall Street.  Fourth, compliant government officials endorsed and enabled these behaviors instead of regulating them.

Finally, we need to look at the important intersection of law and ethics.  Just because something is legal does not mean one should do it.  A legal thing is not always an ethical thing.  Would the Weinbergs’ have permitted Goldman to take positions against their own clients?   Would they have forced AIG into insolvency? Would they have designed scams to fool the EU? I doubt it.

It will be a long time before Goldman restores its reputation.  And President Obama is not catalyzing any restoration of ethics or reputation by calling the current Goldman CEO a savvy businessman.   By its actions, I doubt if Goldman Sachs cares.

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