Report this forum post

Last week's call for comments on the hot issues for 2008 has generated some interesting debate. Climate change, Chinese imports and tariffs seem to be the "biggies", although some forum participants appear more intent on swaying our American audience ahead of the upcoming elections. Clearly though, we've got you thinking about the future of the industry and it would be great to hear some more thoughts - especially on what you'd like to see from the forklift manufacturers. As one of my colleagues puts it, let's hear "where the new 'forklift action' is going to be in 2008".
  • Posted 13 Dec 2007 17:56
  • By Editor
  • joined 13 Dec'07 - 1 message
  • Queensland, Australia

This is ONLY to be used to report flooding, spam, advertising and problematic (harassing, abusive or crude) posts.

Indicates mandatory field
Toyota 8FBE20U
Flesherton, Ontario, Canada
Used - Sale
UN Forklift FBRS15KQZ2
HANGZHOU, Zhejiang, China
New - Sale

PREMIUM business

F. Uchiyama
Global exporter of used forklift and construction machinery, servicing over 80 countries.
Latest job alerts …
Columbia, SC, United States
Wentzville, MO, United States
Cleveland Ohio, United States
Upcoming in the editorial calendar
WIRELESS CHARGING
Aug 2025
MANAGING MIXED FLEETS
Oct 2025

Showcased in the Virtual Expo

Movers & Shakers
Laura Ness Owens Laura Ness Owens
Chief marketing officer, Bobcat Company
Chief commercial officer, Teradyne Robotics
CEO, MHEDA
President, European Rental Association (ERA)
Upcoming industry events …
September 23-25, 2025 - SÃO PAULO, Brazil
October 15-16, 2025 - Las Vegas, United States
November 25-26, 2025 - Singapore, Singapore
Fact of the week
The dot-com bubble, a period of large and rapid investments in internet-based companies, peaked in 2000 and saw the Nasdaq Composite index rise by 579%. Then the bubble imploded. As the value of tech stocks plummeted, cash-strapped internet start-ups became worthless and collapsed.