Fordist automobile production methods are regarded as having been viable only in the USA prior to the 1950s. This paper examines their potential in the largest non-North American automobile market – the UK, using recently-released documentation regarding General Motors’ (GM’s) abortive 1925 takeover bid for Britain’s second largest car manufacturer, the Austin Motor Company. GM’s plans for developing Austin as the leading UK car manufacturer show that existing British mass production methods could have yielded substantially higher productivity, when combined with American systems for achieving “economies of throughput”. This, in turn, required tacit knowledge regarding “flow production” methods, which GM executives identified as the missing...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 40)Capgemini, Detroit, Mich.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bi...
Globalisation demand on productivity tells of an extreme competition and low profitability in the Wo...
Due to interest in automobiles and the way the advancement in technology has brought the production ...
Henry Ford is widely known as the car constructor, the founder of the Ford Motor Company, the pionee...
A hundred years ago, on June 16 th 1903, Henry Ford launched The Ford Motor Company. The follow...
America\u27s love affair with the mechanical \u27\u27horseless carriage\u27 - the automobile - has s...
This thesis examines the process by which General Motors' Cadillac brand of automobiles came to domi...
Automobile manufacture in the UK West Midlands peaked during the 1950s and early 1960s but, with ove...
The North American auto marketplace witnessed a major restructuring during the 1980s. This article e...
This paper sets the scene for this Policy Studies special issue on plant closures by outlining the f...
The big three U.S. auto manufacturers namely General Motors, Ford and Chrysler play an important rol...
Industrial Technology Institute, Ann Arbor, Mich.Charles Stewart Mott Foundation, Flint, Mich.http:/...
Focussing primarily on Europe, this paper examines the evolution of the production technology asso...
This paper identifies the ways in which the ideas of Fordism and Taylorism have been responsible for...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 40)Capgemini, Detroit, Mich.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bi...
Globalisation demand on productivity tells of an extreme competition and low profitability in the Wo...
Due to interest in automobiles and the way the advancement in technology has brought the production ...
Henry Ford is widely known as the car constructor, the founder of the Ford Motor Company, the pionee...
A hundred years ago, on June 16 th 1903, Henry Ford launched The Ford Motor Company. The follow...
America\u27s love affair with the mechanical \u27\u27horseless carriage\u27 - the automobile - has s...
This thesis examines the process by which General Motors' Cadillac brand of automobiles came to domi...
Automobile manufacture in the UK West Midlands peaked during the 1950s and early 1960s but, with ove...
The North American auto marketplace witnessed a major restructuring during the 1980s. This article e...
This paper sets the scene for this Policy Studies special issue on plant closures by outlining the f...
The big three U.S. auto manufacturers namely General Motors, Ford and Chrysler play an important rol...
Industrial Technology Institute, Ann Arbor, Mich.Charles Stewart Mott Foundation, Flint, Mich.http:/...
Focussing primarily on Europe, this paper examines the evolution of the production technology asso...
This paper identifies the ways in which the ideas of Fordism and Taylorism have been responsible for...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 40)Capgemini, Detroit, Mich.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bi...
Globalisation demand on productivity tells of an extreme competition and low profitability in the Wo...
Due to interest in automobiles and the way the advancement in technology has brought the production ...