Brock Yates brilliantly analyzed fall of U.S. auto industry

The Decline and Fall of the American Automobile Industry is one of the most important automotive books of the last 50 years. That’s because Brock Yates presented what may very well be the best all-around critique of Detroit groupthink by a US car buff writer. This is also a strikingly rare example of accountability journalism within the automotive media.

Yates offered the requisite government bashing required of all loyal and true car buff writers, but with this remarkably subversive punchline: “All the government interference could have been avoided if the industry had demonstrated some social responsibility during the 1960s. Had the leadership at General Motors, Ford, and Chrysler been less fascinated with the big-car, big-profit merry-go-round, the overreaction from Washington could have been avoided” (p. 254).

Book grew from a prescient magazine essay

Decline and Fall grew out of a 1968 article Yates wrote for Car and Driver magazine. In that essay, Yates (2018) coined the term “Grosse Pointe myopians” to describe complacent and insular management that was failing to respond to changing post-war consumer needs and aggressive foreign automakers. Grosse Pointe is the exclusive suburb where American auto industry leaders tended to live during that era.

In his book, which was published in 1983, Yates switched to using the term “Detroit Mind” to sum up a penchant for building cars that “were too large, too heavy, too clumsy and too inefficient to meet the needs of the modern driver” (preface).

Also see ‘Brock Yates’ death deserves deeper thinking’

As an automotive enthusiast, Yates was most concerned about the lack of roadworthiness of American cars. For example, he noted that General Motors and Ford refused to bring into the U.S. market a number of European offerings that were internationally competitive when it came to handling and braking (pp. 180-181). However, Yates also lamented Detroit’s bad taste in styling and “negligible regard for quality” (p. 233).

Yates didn’t quite get right Ralph Nader

When discussing the rise of government regulations, Yates didn’t follow the usual practice of demonizing Ralph Nader (go here for a recent example). However, Yates did suggest that Nader’s lack of interest in driving, let alone automotive engineering, resulted in an excessive focus on making vehicles that were “invulnerable: four-wheel padded cells in which witless drivers could bash into each other without fear of injury” (P. 258).

This was not a completely fair assessment. Nader’s book, Unsafe at Any Speed (1966) called for better passenger protections but also criticized the original Ford Mustang for weak handling and braking.

That said, Decline and Fall was an unusually even-handed analysis for an auto buff magazine writer. Not surprisingly, no good deed would go unpunished. As discussed here, Yates was denounced by an industry executive as “worse for the industry than Ralph Nader” (preface).

Decline and Fall is a subtle example of the “new journalism” (Wikipedia, 2021). Yates did not insert himself into the story like a Hunter S. Thompson, but he displayed top-notch storytelling skills.

This is a brilliant book still worth reading.

The Decline and Fall of the American Automobile Industry

  • Brock Yates; 1983
  • Empire Books, New York, NY

“Those who suffered the most from the J-car debacle were hourly workers and lower echelon administrators who soon appeared in the unemployment statistics. Scores of General Motors plants including the J-car factory in Southgate, California, were shut down temporarily, or closed permanently, and many lost their jobs because management thousands of miles away had made a series of blunders. For the most part, it was business as usual. Business the Detroit way.” (p. 76)

“‘It’s like entering the priesthood,’ remarks another local observer. ‘They get out of college and go into the system at the zone level. From then on the Corporation takes care of everything; it sells their houses when they move, invests their incomes, provides them with new cars every few thousand miles, gets them memberships in the right clubs, and so on. They even retire together in GM colonies in the South and Southwest. You talk about a cradle-to-grave welfare state. They simply have no concept of the real world.'” (p. 80)

“Sadly, the entire episode of government regulation of the automobile industry has led to excesses on both sides. The 1970 Clean Air Act, as spearheaded by Senator Edmund Muskie, was pure government overkill, placing more stringent requirements on Detroit than the Japanese or Common Market nations did on manufacturers in their own countries, where pollution was, if anything, worse than in America. Some Washingtonians operated with insufferable arrogance. When informed that massive investment in the research and development of emissions equipment might drive faltering American Motors out of business, Senator Muskie observed, ‘So be it.'” (pp. 260-261)

OTHER REVIEWS:

The New York Times | Commentary Magazine | Amazon


RE:SOURCES

This is an expanded version of a mini-review originally posted December 1, 2019.

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