The U.S. auto industry of the 1940s-60s functioned as a cushy cartel: three large firms generating rents, with unions able to extract a share of those profits in the form of higher pay and especially long-term healthcare and pension benefits, while creativity was channeled into sheet-metal design rather than competition.
causalpending
Speaker
Russ RobertsEvidence Quote
“because they were rents because these three firms are generating profit the unions are able to try... to extract some of those profits for the workers”
Source
Michael Munger on Franchising, Vertical Integration, and the Auto Industry 06/22/2009— EconTalkCreated: 6/17/2026, 10:31:26 AM
My Notes
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