ComputerHunter.org

 

Manufacturing Capacity as a Commodity


Excess capacity in an automobile plant at Ford, Chrysler, Toyota, GM, and Honda is a commodity and those who study finite capacity scheduling modules can readily see the possibilities for increased production and that means profit. Einstein said time is relative, that is true, time is relative, manipulating commodity theoretical models allows companies to see thru time and keep costs and purchases on an even keel without the problems of relative time. Thus the commodity can be simplified to price/cost models. The commodity is still relative to fluctuations in currency, weather, and supply and demand. There is no reason a company like Ford cannot take those plants, which have closed and use them to make something else. Instead, they ran their plants at maximum capacity or close to it, and built lots of cars, which are now in the dealers or on their way to the dealers and there is no need to run the plants now sense there are enough cars built. If the cars become scarce, then the price goes up. As with anything; supply and demand. Are cars a commodity? It appears they are, but more so the time in the excess capacity in the factories is the real commodity although from a purely conceptual standpoint, both the time and the cars are commodities.

Excess capacity also occurs in many other industries, such as electricity, water, oil, mainframe time, bandwidth, etc. When deregulation came to the California energy market we saw an interesting thing occur. People would buy blocks of kilowatt-hours from the existing energy companies who made electricity. They had to make this available to anyone. So entrepreneurs Bought lots of it and then they sold it to others wishing to buy it. Commodity theory is fun to study, because it is everywhere in our civilization, think about it.

"Lance Winslow" - If you have innovative thoughts and unique perspectives, come think with Lance; www.WorldThinkTank.net/wttbbs







Google News - Top Stories

Voice of America

European, Asian markets bounce back
The Associated Press - 1 hour ago
LONDON (AP) - European markets opened strongly Monday following Asia's lead in response to the widespread government efforts over the weekend to shore up the world's troubled financial system.
The financial crisis A light at the end of the tunnel? Economist
World markets welcome European bank rescue New Straits Times
MSN Money - Voice of America - AFP - New York Times
all 869 news articles


Aljazeera.net

Sarah Palin Tones it Down a Notch
ABC News - 48 minutes ago
ABC's Imtiyaz Delawala and Ron Claiborne report: Gov. Sarah Palin significantly ratcheted down the rhetoric in her Sunday evening at an outdoor rally in Rush Run Park in St.
Republicans Fear McCain in Trouble After Hard Week ELECTIONS 2008 RedOrbit
Congressman says McCain sowing 'seeds of hatred' Reuters
Aspen Daily News - Los Angeles Times - New York Times - Columbus Dispatch
all 1,524 news articles


Javno.hr

American Krugman wins 2008 Nobel for economics
Reuters - 55 minutes ago
STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - American economist Paul Krugman won the 2008 Nobel prize for economics for bringing together analysis of trade patterns and where economic activity takes place, the prize committee said on Monday.
Princeton's Paul Krugman Wins Nobel Economics Prize (Update2) Bloomberg
Excerpts from 2008 Nobel economic citation International Herald Tribune
The Associated Press - Princeton University - ScienceBlogs - Philippine Star
all 361 news articles


Canada.com

Zimbabwe: Zimbabweans Flood SA As Power-Sharing Deal Troubled
AllAfrica.com - 52 minutes ago
Park station in downturn Johannesburg, South Africa teems with Zimbabweans arriving in the land of plenty in rattled buses that dramatise the escalating economic crisis back home.
Zimbabwe Opposition Leader Threatens to Quit Power-Share Deal Voice of America
Thabo Mbeki to Zimbabwe to mediate new crisis The Associated Press
International Herald Tribune - Bloomberg - Monsters and Critics.com - BBC News
all 2,565 news articles


BBC News

US Move on N. Korea Assailed in Japan
Washington Post - 1 hour ago
By Blaine Harden TOKYO, Oct. 12 -- A day after the Bush administration removed North Korea from its terrorism blacklist, the country announced that it would resume tearing down its main nuclear plant, and South Korea welcomed the move as a step toward ...
Critics of US-North Korea Nuclear Deal Say US Concedes Too Much Voice of America
North Korea to give UN monitors access to nuclear facilities guardian.co.uk
Monsters and Critics.com - Reuters - Los Angeles Times - Wall Street Journal
all 3,543 news articles

Google
 

Copyright © 2006 Computer Hunter - A Division of Arthur´s Job Base