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  • Jumping the Shark

    Posted on September 3rd, 2009 Michael No comments

    For those of you not familiar with the phrase “jumping the shark”, it is used to denote the point in time something moves past its original objective to a level of absurdity.  The phrase was coined in reference to a long running television program, Happy Days, which change the tenor of the show to attract viewers.  I think that this term can be applied to countries as well. 

    A country’s government is there to serve their citizens based on the country’s style of government.  Different styles of government have a different set of pros and cons, but for the most part governments work to make life better for the majority of their citizens.  Sometimes governments go too far in their efforts and loss sight of what their overall goal is. 

    Although I could pick from about a half a dozen countries that are either already jumping the shark, or are about to, I am going to focus on France.  France has long been a country on the cusp of jumping the shark.  Unfortunately, I think that they have now  jumped the shark. 

    In documented in an article in Industry Week, France Threatens Boycott on U.S. Auto Parts Maker Over Plant Closure, the government of France is trying to force a company to sell a piece of their business to a French group in order to prevent the closing of a parts plant in France.  In the case of the Molex plant in southern Villemur-sur-Tarn, the company has decided that for many reasons, including safety and lower costs, the production needed to be moved to plants in the United States.

    It is one thing to financially back a deal, or even take an equity stake in a business, but to threaten to do damage to a business if they do not agree to a deal is something more prone to criminal organization then a government.  Obviously the deal being offered to Molex was not good enough for them to sell that piece of the business.  As a business, Molex has both a right and a responsibility to do what is best for the business.  France does not have the right to use extortion to force a company to do a financially suspect deal.

    Just by threatening a boycott, France has jumped the shark.   Let’s hope that they see their error and jump back.  If not, our government has to do its job or they might be jumping the shark.