ChatterBank3 mins ago
Toyota to create hundreds of jobs in the UK
27 Answers
http://www.independen...n-the-uk-6267284.html
/// Prime Minister David Cameron said the announcement was "fantastic news and a massive vote of confidence for UK manufacturing".///
Pity he didn't voice the same vote of confidence for the train makers Bombardier.
/// Prime Minister David Cameron said the announcement was "fantastic news and a massive vote of confidence for UK manufacturing".///
Pity he didn't voice the same vote of confidence for the train makers Bombardier.
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It's good news.
It's not cowardice on Cameron's point.
Crap product, wrong price. No one else would touch their products with the proverbial barge pole - I can just imagine your reaction, Messi, when the train (the Bombardier one) that you were on, ground to a halt making you miss an important appointment.......and that it wasn't just a one off, it had been happening on that line for some time.
It's not cowardice on Cameron's point.
Crap product, wrong price. No one else would touch their products with the proverbial barge pole - I can just imagine your reaction, Messi, when the train (the Bombardier one) that you were on, ground to a halt making you miss an important appointment.......and that it wasn't just a one off, it had been happening on that line for some time.
Bombardier doesn’t have the facilities at its Derby plant to carry out the work it was tendering to do for the British government. The plant is only equipped to handle aluminum. The Thameslink trains were specified to be build of steel. Industry experts say that upgrading the factory to handle steel is commercially unviable.
Limited financial credibility of the company would have heavily increased the cost of borrowing, which caused Bombardier to lose to Siemens. Bombardier’s debt has been rated by credit rating agencies to BB+, along with other bidders, such as Alstom and Hitachi, whereas Siemens debt is rated at A+, a difference of six notches.
In short, Bombardier could not do the work without investing in new plant, and did not have the money to do so.
Limited financial credibility of the company would have heavily increased the cost of borrowing, which caused Bombardier to lose to Siemens. Bombardier’s debt has been rated by credit rating agencies to BB+, along with other bidders, such as Alstom and Hitachi, whereas Siemens debt is rated at A+, a difference of six notches.
In short, Bombardier could not do the work without investing in new plant, and did not have the money to do so.
I should have attributed the information above to this blog.
http://www.toonaripos...ological-shortcoming/
http://www.toonaripos...ological-shortcoming/
So Toyota only produces a "European" hatchback because of the EU, jake?
Er, I don't think so. Car makers produce a European model to suit the European market in terms of size, performance and so on. SImilarly they produce a North American range to suit that market, not because the United States is a federation of states. \let's not get too confused.
Er, I don't think so. Car makers produce a European model to suit the European market in terms of size, performance and so on. SImilarly they produce a North American range to suit that market, not because the United States is a federation of states. \let's not get too confused.
Gromit
Your link was written by Muhammed Faraaz who is based in India, and relates his findings to a BBC report.
Have you the actual BBC link that says it is all down to the Derby firm of Bombardier not having the necessary facilities to build these coaches?
Here are reports on the real implications of first the Labour Government giving away the contract, only to be later backed by the Coalition.
The implications being the loss of not only around 1,400 workers at Bombardier, but also thousands more jobs at risk at firms across the country,
http://www.independen...ost-jobs-2349978.html
http://www.guardian.c...german-rival-contract
Can't see anything in this BBC link that backs up your original link neither.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-13792510
Your link was written by Muhammed Faraaz who is based in India, and relates his findings to a BBC report.
Have you the actual BBC link that says it is all down to the Derby firm of Bombardier not having the necessary facilities to build these coaches?
Here are reports on the real implications of first the Labour Government giving away the contract, only to be later backed by the Coalition.
The implications being the loss of not only around 1,400 workers at Bombardier, but also thousands more jobs at risk at firms across the country,
http://www.independen...ost-jobs-2349978.html
http://www.guardian.c...german-rival-contract
Can't see anything in this BBC link that backs up your original link neither.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-13792510
It is good news we have the contract to make the product, it is bad news that it is not a UK company generating and profiting from the wealth. It all depends on how you want to look at it. It seems to me that if one argues it is a good thing for us to invest abroad, then the argument for it being a good thing for a foreign country to invest here takes a blow. Both may profit, but not as much as they could were the circumstances different.
AOG
// Bombardier does not have the facilities at its Derby factory to carry out work it has been invited to bid for by the government, the BBC understands.
The Department for Transport (DfT) said the firm could protect jobs by securing a deal to upgrade CrossCountry trains.
The work would involve building new steel carriages but the plant is only equipped to weld aluminium, BBC Derby's political reporter Chris Doidge said. //
http://www.digitalhen...d-derbyshire-14947244
// Bombardier does not have the facilities at its Derby factory to carry out work it has been invited to bid for by the government, the BBC understands.
The Department for Transport (DfT) said the firm could protect jobs by securing a deal to upgrade CrossCountry trains.
The work would involve building new steel carriages but the plant is only equipped to weld aluminium, BBC Derby's political reporter Chris Doidge said. //
http://www.digitalhen...d-derbyshire-14947244
I think you're confused NJ
We are the most dependant nation in Europe on inbound investment like this.
Toyota are not interested in the British Market but the European Market and we have to stay part of that to continue to attract this sort of investment
BTW where's Geezer/Kayless on how British Motor workers are militant scum who can't be trusted to make cars without striking every 5 minutes
Seems quiet
We are the most dependant nation in Europe on inbound investment like this.
Toyota are not interested in the British Market but the European Market and we have to stay part of that to continue to attract this sort of investment
BTW where's Geezer/Kayless on how British Motor workers are militant scum who can't be trusted to make cars without striking every 5 minutes
Seems quiet
Gromit
/// If we were no longer in the EU, Toyota would not have built its European model here. It would have built it in another EU
country. ///
That being the case why did they particularly choose the UK in the first place, surely it wasn't just because we were a member of the EU, because they could have chosen other countries?
/// If we were no longer in the EU, Toyota would not have built its European model here. It would have built it in another EU
country. ///
That being the case why did they particularly choose the UK in the first place, surely it wasn't just because we were a member of the EU, because they could have chosen other countries?
// Why did [Toyota] particularly choose the UK in the first place, surely it wasn't just because we were a member of the EU, because they could have chosen other countries? //
Yes it was. From Toyota's own website
// Toyota's decision to establish a manufacturing operation in Europe was announced in 1989 and Toyota Manufacturing UK was established in December that year. //
http://recruitment.to...com/home/about-us.jsp
Yes it was. From Toyota's own website
// Toyota's decision to establish a manufacturing operation in Europe was announced in 1989 and Toyota Manufacturing UK was established in December that year. //
http://recruitment.to...com/home/about-us.jsp
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