The 1990s
gave us the Gulf War, UN Agenda 21, the global warming hoax, forced lending to
unqualified buyers and loaded indigent healthcare to our bills. Political
Correctness was being established to distract us.
Most of
the companies in the Fortune 100 in 1990 were still manufacturing and oil
companies. Auto companies were screwing up with muscle cars and forgot to
attend to increasing gas mileage and fixing quality problems. But GM had
increased its revenue from $66 billion to $127 billion.
Most
products were made in the US by US citizen workers and these products were
mostly sold in the US to US consumers. These are the jobs we are attempting to
bring back to the US.
This was
the decade before we gave all of our manufacturing jobs away,
The
revenues reported below demonstrate how inflation from 1960 to1990 resulted in
a 10-fold increase in revenues in 1990. GM revenue was $11 billion in 1960, $24
billion in 1970 and $66 billion in 1980 and $127 billion in 1990. The Japanese
cars were continuing to arrive in the US and were becoming popular with US
consumers.
Fortune
100 Revenues in 1990 ranged from $5.130B to $126.974B. This is more than double
the revenues reported in 1980.
GM
$126.974B
Ford
$96.932B
Exxon
Mobil $86.656B
IBM
$63.438B
GE
$55.264B
Mobil
$50.976B
Altria
Group $39.069B
Chrysler
$36.156B
DuPont
$35.209B
Texaco
$32.416B
ChevronTexaco
$29.443B
Amoco
$24.214B
Shell Oil
$21.703B
Procter
& Gamble $21.689B
Boeing
$20.276B
Occidental
Petroleum $20.068B
United
Technologies $19.765B
Eastman
Kodak $18.546B
Marathon
Oil $17.755B
Dow Chemical
$17.730B
Xerox
$17.635B
Atlantic
Richfield $15.905B
PepsiCo
$15.419B
Nabisco
Grp Holdings $15.244B
McDonnell
Douglas $14.995B
Tenneco
Automotive $14.439B
Digital
Equipment $12.866B
CBS
$12.844B
Rockwell
Automation $12.633B
ConocoPhillips
$12.492B
Honeywell
Intl. $12.021B
3M
$11.990B
Hewlett-Packard
$11.899B
Sara Lee
$11.738B
International
Paper $11.378B
ConAgra
Foods $11.340B
Alcoa
$11.161B
Caterpillar
$11.126B
Goodyear
$11.044B
Unocal
$10.417B
Georgia
Pacific $10.171B
Weyerhaeuser
$10.105B
Unisys $10.097B
General
Dynamics $10.053B
Lockheed
Martin $9.932B
Sunoco
$9.927B
Johnson
& Johnson $9.844B
Motorola
$9.620B
Anheuser-Busch
$9.481B
Bristol-Myers
Squibb $9.422G
Coca-Cola
$7.171B
Raytheon
$8.796B
Union
Carbide $8.744B
Monsanto
$8.681B
Coastal
$8.681B
Unilever
US $8.114B
ADM
$8.057B
Ashland
$8.017B
Time
Warner $7.642B
Borden
Chemical $7.593B
Textron
$7.440B
TRW
$7.408B
Baxter
Intl. $7.399B
Fortune
Brands $7.268B
Honeywell
$7.242B
Deere
$7.221B
Emerson
Electric $7.071B
Wyeth
$6.747B
Merck
$6.698B
Texas
Instruments $6.592B
LTV
$6.362B
Sealed
Air $6.331B
Whirlpool
$6.319B
North
American Phillips $6.203B
Reynolds
Metals $6.201B
NCR
$5.956B
Hanson
Ind. $5.933B
Pfizer
$5.604B
HJ Heinz
$5.832B
PPG Ind.
$5.825B
Martin
Marietta $5.814B
General
Mills $5.798B
Kimberly-Clark
$5.777B
Quaker
Oats $5.724B
Campbell
Soup $5.710B
Amerada
Hess $5.589B
Abbott
Labs $5.453B
Bayer
$5.425B
BASF
$5.422B
Lyondell
Chemical $5.374B
Stone
Container $5.361B
Bethlehem
Steel $5.306B
Apple
$5.284B
Champion
Intl. $5.254B
Northrup
Grumman $5.200B
Dana
$5.157B
Litton
Ind. $5.130B
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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