AlotOfReading 17 hours ago

Not to dismiss the issues here, but the entire American automotive sector works like this.

It's practically standard policy for OEMs to stiff smaller vendors with flagrant disregard for their obligations, because every day of delay and every dollar they don't have to pay is more margin for the OEM. In many cases it doesn't even matter if doing so it's detrimental to the long term health of the OEM, as happened during the COVID supply shocks. Finance gets their way.

As an engineer, I've found out from more than one vendor that the delivery I was expecting to start production isn't happening because finance just decided they didn't want to issue payment.

  • deim3n8ight 16 hours ago

    It’s like the Gastronomie Branche in Vienna

    • robk 16 hours ago

      Can you share what that means? To a non German speaker this is of no significance

      • MagnumOpus 13 hours ago

        He used the German term for the hospitality sector.

      • kratom_sandwich 11 hours ago

        As a German speaker, it doesn’t make much sense either

    • Freedom2 15 hours ago

      Agreed, or like the the inshoku gyōkai in Tokyo.

  • dzhiurgis 9 hours ago

    97b in revenue per year. 10% of cars is made by suppliers, so maybe 9b goes to suppliers. 750m of liabilities per month. There's going to be millions hanging out there perpetually. AKA normal for every large business.

    p.s. Tesla is not indebted like every other business (10-15x less debt, 5-6x more cash), so interest doesn't really count for them.

  • DocTomoe 16 hours ago

    I think this needs to be understood by more people, and as a society, we need to start acting against these practices (e.g. by collectively blacklisting organisations who do not fulfil their obligations).

    • roncesvalles 16 hours ago

      Well then they'll just source the part from abroad. This is the same flavor of thinking as "tech workers should unionize".

      • cowcity 14 hours ago

        Excuse me? Unionization is responsible every worker's rights law ever passed.

        • dontlaugh 12 hours ago

          Exactly, tech workers would be fools to not unionise. All of them, in every country.

      • DocTomoe 15 hours ago

        Let them. And let them eat the higher cost - foreign suppliers will not ship that stuff for free, and will demand securities for large orders. At some point, there will be a financial equilibrium.

  • Gibbon1 15 hours ago

    After working at small companies most of my career. Anytime someone angrily states that little people must pay their bills or else I reflexively think about how much corporate America does not. Really common they'll withhold the last payment until they need something else.

    I keep coming back to a study I read a long time ago where they administered college students a test to score sociopathy as freshmen and again as seniors. Not surprising seniors scored lower then freshmen, except business and economics where they scored a lot higher. Makes me more receptive to the old school idea that college is partly there to provide a moral education.

Animats 17 hours ago

Never keep working after the first unpaid bill.

  • AlotOfReading 16 hours ago

    The big tier ones (Bosch, Continental, etc) insist on payment up front specifically to avoid this. It's the smaller vendors that don't have leverage to set payment terms who get screwed.

    One tactic I've seen OEMs use is to buy for multiple products and stop payments for one as a test. If the vendor complains, they lose all the unrelated business (possibly including clawbacks!) and the OEM moves to the second source. This can kill the supplier.

    The winning move is not to play.

    • Incipient 13 hours ago

      As a small player in the services game (data consulting) the only way to do it is to have good relationships with the people paying the bills. Even with good agreements, you still need the client to be on your side.

    • noobermin 16 hours ago

      If no one plays then nothing will be made.

    • mthoms 15 hours ago

      Absolutely brutal. Wow.

      • spwa4 11 hours ago

        One big secret in economics is that essentially the whole world is demand constrained. There's exceptions, but they're few and far between. And in all of economics you will not find a solution to that anywhere, hell they don't even explain this. Obviously the supply/demand curve is in reality not linear: at low prices it goes entirely horizontal and constrained below physical needs it goes entirely vertical. Obviously, no linear model can do this. There's no real point in doing more of anything than we are doing now. Think of it like this: if in Paris double as much bread was made tomorrow, and sold at any price, there would not be even a minimal rise in bread consumption. We have enough. Essentially all of it would be thrown away. Now replace bread by just about anything, and you'd see the same problem. So "relationships" are what gets business, or as you might call it "selling demand". And it's very easy for buyers to abuse the system.

  • rtkwe 17 hours ago

    At the risk of never getting paid and losing the rest of the contract and any money you've invested getting to the first delivery and payment point.

    • bruce511 16 hours ago

      Look, I get it, I was starting out once, and out of necessity did some "high risk" work where we invested a lot of time before getting paid. Sometimes it worked out, sometimes it failed.

      I learned to understand that -risk- has a value. All transactions have risk, maybe I don't deliver, maybe you don't pay.

      I now explicitly factor risk into quotes. We can share risk (you pay some, but not all, up front, coupled with progress payments), or I can take the risk (I'm pricing it higher, and assuming you're skipping the last payment), or you can take the risk (pay up front, but pay less.)

      Treating risk as a line-item in the budget helps both parties understand the pricing better. Having a track record (of paying or producing) helps the other party accept more if the risk.

      I've had some clients prove to be unreliable payers. For them I accept no risk. All work us done on a "pay first" basis. Some choose to find another supplier. I don't consider that a loss.

    • jakelazaroff 17 hours ago

      If you keep working, you still run the risk of never getting paid — in which case your lost investment would be more time and money than it would've been if you'd stopped after the first unpaid bill.

    • fuzztester 16 hours ago

      Wrong notion.

      Eff, what kind of sucker [1] are you?

      "You" (not you) already took a risk which failed. Now you are talking about taking on more risk with the same person who cheated you, like a lallu (Hindi term for a sucker)?

      You're promoting wrong ideas, which are harmful to everyone here who is a supplier.

      You need a principle from Econ 101:

        Don't throw good money after bad. 
      
      Animats is right.
  • OutOfHere 16 hours ago

    For software related things, if it stops working, you will then get paid immediately to fix it. That's when you get paid, fix it, and never work for them again.

bix6 17 hours ago

This current crop of rich people really sucks.

  • ncr100 6 hours ago

    One wonders if this is merely the age of information, and during "the before times" the rich people really sucked too.

    Soap box:

    Having A LOT of money can suggest to a person that Everyone Else's Rules Do Not Apply To ME. Because they don't, largely. The trick is not letting that idea infest your mind with fallacies, such as YOUR Rules Do Not MATTER.

v5v3 13 hours ago

It's the high cost of the legal system that allows large companies with deeper pockets to bully small suppliers.

Not just in USA but many other countries too.

dbg31415 17 hours ago

Musk pulled the same stunt with vendors after buying Twitter.

The news is full of stories about him settling cases because his actions were either illegal or in breach of contracts.

He comes across as supremely arrogant—someone who refuses to play by the rules and probably never will.

At this point, if you extend him credit or don’t demand full payment up front, that’s on you for trusting him.

  • philips 17 hours ago
    • hn_throwaway_99 17 hours ago

      I'm curious how this works over time. I read somewhere (would have to search to find it) that after Trump became notorious for stiffing small contractors on his properties, the wisdom them became you just quoted a ~50% premium, because you knew Trump would only pay you 2/3 of what he originally said he would.

      But agree with your statement, which is why I always gag a little when I see working class people lionize these two as "champions of the working man".

      • ujkhsjkdhf234 17 hours ago

        Trump believes there is a winner and loser in everything. So you stiff the contractor, he gets upset and might not work with you again, you just get another contractor. Trump was a big enough name and has enough money that even if his reputation is horrible, people aren't just going to not work with him. You can imagine that how works on a global scale as president.

        • exasperaited 6 hours ago

          > Trump believes there is a winner and loser in everything.

          This, precisely. It's Fred Trump's mantra, inherited.

          It's also bound up with his malignant narcissism; no deal is ever closed, it can always be renegotiated and he can always decide it was bad for him even when it was his deal.

          People did refuse to work with him, though I am sure the rest came to realise you overbilled so you got paid at all.

          And he made some hilariously bad deals when he was desperate (the ghostwriter for The Art of the Deal got comically good terms because Trump was so desperate to have a book).

          Famously his lawyers would only meet with him in pairs. He is that untrustworthy.

          All of this factors into how the tariff deals are going; any diplomatic department anywhere in the world understands all of this.

          • hn_throwaway_99 4 hours ago

            > All of this factors into how the tariff deals are going; any diplomatic department anywhere in the world understands all of this.

            NYTimes (I think it was) just had an article that talked about how these other countries made these outlandish commitments to buy way more gas from the US than they'd ever need, or make insane amounts of investments in the US that they would never need to do, but the agreements were "light on implementation details". That shit is never going to happen.

            • exasperaited 3 hours ago

              Also people can get away with re-promising things already promised; this is how Trump was played by Mexico and Canada at the beginning of his term. They glowingly offered him things the USA had already been offered that he is ignorant of.

              He has a tendency to agree with the last person he spoke to who was nice to him, and he's also extremely vulnerable to flattery generally. If someone is making him happy he doesn't much care what they are saying.

              The EU "deal" has convinced Trump that things have been committed by the EU that they literally do not have the power to commit.

              The right wing press in the UK, even, was like, "haha, EU suckers, we got a better deal than you". And it is true, we've done very well by blowing diplomatic smoke up his arse, offering him a second state visit, generally Mandelson-ing them all.

              But right wing media still tends to believe he's a great dealmaker when he is actually not; they simply didn't notice that he'd been fobbed off with undeliverables. And that means he gets the coverage from them that he is looking for.

    • exasperaited 17 hours ago

      Similar psychology, too, and extremely similar backstory: a truly dreadful, cruel, selfish man for a father. Fred Trump would have found a lot in common with Errol Musk, and they both did a lot of emotional damage to their sons in their early years. They are fully the products of emotional damage in early childhood.

      (Musk has the small advantage of being able to express his feelings about his father’s behaviour; Trump still worships his)

      • DFHippie 10 hours ago

        If this were the whole story you'd expect all of Trump and Elon's siblings to be equally terrible. Maybe they are and just haven't had the opportunity to demonstrate it? I have the impression, though, at least in Trump's case, he's in a different league.

        • exasperaited 8 hours ago

          Not necessarily. Every psychopath has a golden child, after all; perhaps it’s the same here. It depends who was singled out for more abuse and coldness or demands, and it depends who had more parental love from the other parent, and it could also be a question of genetic predisposition in terms of how they react, it might be different if you have more siblings, etc.

          Maryanne Trump Barry —- a federal judge —- was nevertheless part of the family tax cheating scheme.

          Robert Trump cheated on his wife and his egregious behaviour seemingly drove her to an overdose.

          Fred Trump Jr (Mary’s dad and Fred’s eldest, intended to run the business) drank himself to death, unable to survive the unbearable pressure his father put on him.

          DJT is in a different league for sure: he is a malignant narcissist which is already a very unusual personality type, and he was also shaped and protected by Roy Cohn.

          Either way, evil dads are always in the back stories of these guys (Emory Tate was a cruel, diagnosed narcissist, a misogynist and adulterer, and often absent too)