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by gumby 2304 days ago
Welch was destructive for GE and the cult of his approach has been destructive for the industrial sector.

He turned around GE for the short term, but undermined the fundamental model of a conglomerate (there are good arguments for and against conglomerates, but GE was an is one). The metrics used were ultimately all short term ones and allowed the business to become lopsided, a disaster from which it has still not recovered.

The analogy of "cutting the fat" (nicely timed for the era of the Jane Fonda workout)* was stupid. Actual healthy humans have body fat in the teens, with a few elite athletes (who do nothing but train) at the very low end. Instead the mantra was to consider anything not immediately useful -- drive the "body fat" to 0%.

It's like a community madness, and it spread to corporate America and to some extent governments as well which has resulted in the current parlous state of the economy: a Potemkin economy that looks great only because the metrics used all face the "painted side".

Good riddance to this blood sucker.

* no insult intended for the Jane Fonda Workout

2 comments

> Good riddance to this blood sucker.

Really? You don't agree with his corporate style / strategy / books and that justifies saying something like that?

I could not care less that he destroyed GE and became rich in the process. That's a GE shareholder problem. But I had hoped my message was about more than corporate "style".

First: he's been fundamentally destructive to the global economy, which has had a particularly brutal effect on, IMHO, the majority of people who live in countries that were industrial economies in the 1980s. The hollowing out of the middle class and precarious economic position of younger GenXers and millennials can be laid in a large part at the unthinking adoption of the bullshit he promoted and demonstrated. (note that I am at the beginning of GenX and my child as younger than a millennial so I am not bitter from some personal hurt here).

(BTW although GE outsourced during this period, so did many companies, and I do not lay that at his feet. And the result of outsourcing is much more of a mixed bag than it is often described, and in the balance is likely even positive, though the way it was implemented in the US was a combination of this "strip to the bone" which yes has been destructive.)

Second: true, he's dead and that's a tragedy to his family and close friends which I don't downplay. But also he was an asset stripping parasite whose model has ultimately been destructive and he was a lauded champion of such behavior. His death is an opportunity for people to reflect on his immoral behavior the consequences of which we are still suffering from.

I like the analogy, "Want to lose weight fast? Cut off a leg!" strategy.