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Outsourcing the Bosses: The Lesson of Fiat-Chrysler

By Dean Baker, AlterNet. Posted May 4, 2009.


What the new Chrysler will be getting from abroad is technology and top management.

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The media coverage of the auto bailouts has focused on the need for union autoworkers to take big pay cuts, causing them to once again miss the real story. The Fiat-Chrysler deal shows that the pay problem is at the top, not the bottom. At the end of the day, the new Chrysler is still likely to be producing most of its cars in the United States. What the new company will be getting from abroad is technology and top management.

This big story was so easily missed because it runs against one of the main myths that our elites have cultivated about the US economy: that the country has a "comparative advantage" in highly skilled labor. In this story, the United States will continue to lose manufacturing and other "less-skilled" jobs as its economy becomes more concentrated in highly skilled sectors.

This story was convenient for our elites because it meant that the decline of manufacturing was a necessary, if sometimes painful, part of a natural economic progression. It also justified the growing inequality in US society that benefited not just Wall Street bankers and CEOs, but also millions of doctors, lawyers, economists, and other highly educated workers. These people took their six-figure salaries as a birthright, even as the pay of less educated workers stagnated or declined.

While this story of the US becoming a high skills center in the world economy may have been comforting to the elites, and was widely promoted by economists and the news media, there was never much truth to it. Highly skilled professionals did well in recent decades not because they succeeded in international competition, but rather because they were largely sheltered from it.

Trade agreements like NAFTA were explicitly designed to remove any barrier that made it difficult to export manufacturing goods to the United States, thereby placing US manufacturing workers directly in competition with their much lower paid counterparts in the developing world. Most of these restrictions had nothing to do with tariffs. Instead the key issues were rules protecting investment in the developing world along with limits on the ability of the US to exclude imports through safety or environmental regulations.

There has never been any similar effort to eliminate the barriers that prevent professionals from the developing world from coming to the United States and competing directly with their US counterparts as doctors or lawyers or in other highly paid professions.

The economists and the media somehow failed to notice that professionals were intentionally sheltered from international competition and instead just trumpeted them as the winners in the global economy. We were just treated to a beautiful example of this double standard when the media and the economists got all huffy about the "buy America" provision in the stimulus bill that might have protected a few manufacturing jobs in steel and other industries.

While this provision was roundly condemned and eventually watered down, the buy America provision in the Treasury's latest bank bailout bill went completely unnoticed. This provision requires that any investment manager taking part in the program be headquartered in the United States. Even though the argument against protectionism in financial services is identical to the argument against protectionism in steel, no one bothered to make the argument when Wall Street was the beneficiary of protectionism.

The end result of this protectionism for those at the top is a bloated overpaid sector of top managers, which is what we saw at Chrysler. If we compare wages for assembly-line workers in Europe and the United States, there would not be much difference between the pay of UAW members and their counterparts in Europe. However, there would be a very large difference between the multi-million dollar pay packages of the top executives at the US companies and their European counterparts. The pay gaps persist among the more highly paid engineers and management personnel.

Therefore, it was only logical that a bailout of Chrysler would seek to take advantage of the lower cost management and design skills available at a European car company like Fiat. In Chrysler, as in other companies, the high pay packages for these people are like an anchor dragging them down in international competition. If the US is to be competitive in the 21st century, we must either bring the pay of those at the top back down to earth or we should look to follow the lead of Chrysler and contract out for these services.


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See more stories tagged with: inequality, ceo pay, chrysler, executive compensation

Dean Baker is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research.

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Sauce fir the Goose
Posted by: JSquercia on May 4, 2009 2:34 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Good article I have been saying for years that we should outsource some of those Senior Management Positions up to and including CEO . Those guys make a small fraction of the wages for our bloated Senior Management .

Yes indeed what is sauce for the Goose (workers) is sauce for the Gander (upper level management)

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» IT Posted by: dcyalter
Foreign CEO's are much cheaper and do better work.
Posted by: FbO Vorcha on May 5, 2009 3:22 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
They've already sent the jobs to lower cost countries (read India, China, Korea, etc.), they should now move the CEO's there. It would put them closer to where the work is being done, and the stockholders would get a much better return on their investment. For what we pay an American CEO we can get thirty or forty CEO's where the work is being done.

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» Complaining about H1-B Visas? Posted by: gellero1
Buy American
Posted by: SeattlePackedSnowandCollidedCars on May 5, 2009 3:49 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm Subaru because they just an't for Liberals Anymore. Really, I've always been a WRX STi fan. I really wanted a Chevy Camaro however I'm tired of supporting a political campaign and a corrupt union.

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» Liberals? Posted by: Sparks56
» RE: Liberals? Posted by: 2thepoint
» RE: Liberals? Posted by: Sparks56
» RE: Buy American Posted by: 2thepoint
» RE: Buy American Posted by: Wacre
» RE: Buy American Posted by: Wacre
If our bosses came from China we'd have a better run financial sector.
Posted by: and_abottleofrum on May 5, 2009 4:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We need H1B visas for the executive class. We could also pay them less and save a ton of money.

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They Failed
Posted by: Sparks56 on May 5, 2009 4:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
They Failed. The cold, hard fact, the truth that cannot be denied, that almost nobody is talking about, is the failure, the incompetence, of American executives. And I include union evecutives as well. In Detroit, Wall St., and Washington, the writing has been on the wall for over twenty years.
The bitter irony is that the ones most responsible made tons of money on excuses, smoke and mirrors, and snake oil.

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To see Fiat's work, check out the Suzuki SX4
Posted by: Jasonix on May 5, 2009 5:40 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The body of the Suzuki SX4 was designed by Fiat's design team, and the car is sold in Europe as the Fiat Sedicci. A nice car for the money, way better than the comparable Kia or Hyundai models. I'm interested in what Fiat might do with Chrysler, based on what they did with Suzuki. Suzuki might make the economy cars while Chrysler makes the high-end stuff.

Check out the Suzuki SX4 here.

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Big Auto should just collapse and allow room for smaller local/regional auto businesses to grow.
Posted by: Benn_Miller on May 5, 2009 7:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It makes no sense only focusing on saving the union workers or even the companies themselves when the whole thing is rotten to the core. These same auto giants were the ones who went out to stamp out newer inventions and even improvements. There is no lesson to be learned from Chrysler so far as long as they keep getting bailouts from the taxpayers of course. The only way people will learn the lessons from Chrysler and other big auto giants is to first let them die. If Detroit suffers from it, so be it but Detroit will actually have a life from allowing the auto giants to crash.

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» RE: Thomas Friedman Posted by: wbblack
» How do you know that? Posted by: gellero1
Fiat has better technology?
Posted by: Mrs. Jefferson on May 5, 2009 8:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is a deception since technology is all over the world now not just in Italy.

The international technology corporations such as Siemens, GE, Texas Instruments, Microsoft, Allen Bradley, etc. go all over the world installing, teaching, and selling the new technology. They are in America since most the modern technology came from here.

Remember that fight to be the most advanced technology county in the world? We needed to do that to survive. California and Microsoft did that for us. What happened?

Ever since Reagan CA technology and markets have been off shored and stolen. The Dot.com financial fraud ruined a lot of CA technology companies. Huge numbers of computer experts were left without jobs, etc. It is my opinion that Wall Street and the Neo Cons didn't want the West coast to have so much wealth and power (or employee sharing wealth).

It is a big lie that we need Fiat technology. It is just another step to destory our economy and wealth for the EU (royals and Neo Cons). They divide up our wealth for themselves.

Every time they move a corporation and set it up again, it is set up to remove good wages and destroy unions. They use our tax dollars to do it too.

Shame on Obama and Bush and Congress. They caused the problem now they are the solution?

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Does anyone
Posted by: willymack on May 5, 2009 12:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Seriously think the auto kingpins are GOOD people? That we have friends in Detroit? These assholes made schlock cars for how long? Long before Detroit adapted radial tires, disc brakes, Mac Pherson struts, rack & pinion steering, and other European innovations, better, safer, and more economical cars were being made there, while Detroit kept right on marketing clunkers here. The auto bigwigs got away with this irresponsible crap for so long, they began to think of themselves as bulletproof. Reality hit them hard, and they didn't react nearly quickly enough. Now the Big Three are about to be pared down to Ford. There's a certain amount of justice there, except for those who trusted and depended on the honesty and integrity of the bigwigs for their living.

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» RE: Does anyone Posted by: Dickinseattl
Re-designing the Auto Industry
Posted by: zrants on May 5, 2009 12:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Some excellent points are being made here. We do need new management and design skills to jump-start the US auto industry, and it makes perfect sense to buy into current technology instead of reinventing the wheel. There are some others element of the equation that are not getting much attention.

Car companies must sell overseas. Adding US dealerships to Fiat's distribution system is an important component in their strategy. The engineering challenge will be to meet America's strict safety and emissions requirements. Once that is achieved, we should see a resurgence of Fiats being manufactured and sold here. As a former Spider owner, I look forward to it.

The European engine of choice is diesel. They burn cleaner, more efficiently, and will run on bio-diesel. Manufacturing diesel from petroleum requires less processing and energy consumption so it is a win win proposition.

What the world needs now is a new attitude toward smaller cars. Most people who buy trucks don't need them all the time and would be perfectly served by a truck rental agency.

I see smaller, more efficient, cleaner cars being manufactured in America within the next two years.

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» Why in America?? Posted by: gellero1
» RE: invent the wheel - it's time! Posted by: kettleblack
Chrysler didn't fail, IMF Repubs and Demos killed it.
Posted by: Dickinseattl on May 5, 2009 7:57 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The economic class war will go on until the US is turned into a Labor exploited Third World nation like China, Russia, or Mexico. Then organized crime will provide the good paying jobs in our coming national gang drug wars. Obama's Clinton Treasury Dept. made sure our credit starved auto companies only got some of the loan they needed on IMF leveraged buy out terms. As the parts suppliers go under and our auto manufacturing with them, Fiat will take over what is left at fire sale and scrap prices. With millions of americans now out of their homes and out of their jobs as well thanks to Republican and Blue dog Demos, it may be almost time for a real class war. Watch out for the armoured and military weaponized local Gestapo police, not to mentioned the new battle hardened killer National Guard forces.

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The NAFTA promise
Posted by: gellero1 on May 5, 2009 10:15 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
One wonders if the Obamabots will hold their Messiah to his stated policy of reviewing and changing NAFTA.

Or will they finally admit he is just another celebrity politician, presented to them by the powers that be, sucker punched by the 'rope a dope' campaign strategy.

Perhaps the know-nothing youth who worked on The Leader's Campaign...............those who have never seen sound money, secure property rights, true privacy and anonymity, will wake up when they find the summer jobs they were expecting to help with college are taken by the millions of illegal aliens who will work for less, and that they need to borrow from our 'benevolent' goverment backed banks to pay inflated tuition prices, courtesy of the same easy money policies that created the housing bubble and financial meltdown.

And when they graduate in debt, and find their income taxed at 40-50%, realize that they have been reduced to modern day serfs. And if they don't or can't pay back the loans, find they are barred from many jobs and professions. Are the youth of today so dumbed down they cannot see that this really is fact?

Don't blame the auto companies for their problems. The fools who post here don't see that taxation and investment are directly related.

We'll see if the MSM holds the President to his NAFTA pledge. But don't hold your breath....all politicians lie to gain power....and once they gain it.........dole out the Treasury...wealth confiscated by high taxation.....to the Institutions, Groups, Corporations that will continue to support the existing power structure.

By the way, the definition of the above is 'fascism'.....the only thing lacking so far are the snappy uniforms and the inevitable violence.

The Democratic Party is the master of the 'New Amerika'

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» RE: The NAFTA promise Posted by: DaBear
Wasn't Chrysler Daimler-Chrysler at one time?
Posted by: DaBear on May 6, 2009 12:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But now it's just "Chrysler" and now Fiat-Chrysler?

What, did Daimler Benz chicken out or something? Where'd that story go?

The way the MSM gets everything all cockeyed and bullfrogged, it's a wonder 'Merkaans aren't more butt-stoopid than we already are.... this is the ave. 'Merkaan on NCLB, this is yer brain on MSM crack...

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