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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

How to Save Motor City

By Marissa Colon-Margolies, The Nation. Posted December 1, 2008.


Letting Detroit fail: catastrophic. Transforming it into a lean green machine-maker: visionary.
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    A lame-duck Congress balked on November 20 over a bailout for the auto industry, saying no action could be taken until the Big Three produced a viable plan for their own salvation. This was a victory for those who have been waging all-out war against a proposed government rescue package. Republican Senator Richard Shelby of Alabama has called the auto industry a "dinosaur" that should go extinct if it can't compete in the free market, while many of his colleagues blame everything from the Big Three's uninspired business model to unionized

      It is true that General Motors, Chrysler and Ford are culpable in great part for the crisis they face. They have long suffered from institutional torpor, from an inability to consolidate redundant brands and make relevant, fuel-efficient cars Americans want to buy. Nonetheless, allowing GM or any of the Big Three to fail would be catastrophic. The auto industry represents almost 4 percent of gross domestic product and 10 percent of industrial output by value. A study recently published by the Center for Automotive Research estimates that a collapse of the Big Three would eliminate nearly 3 million jobs in just the first year, as well as $21.1 billion in Social Security receipts and $24.7 billion in federal income tax payments. Bloomberg has reported that a collapse of GM alone could cost between $100 billion and $200 billion in government-funded benefits. This figure greatly exceeds proposed bailout numbers.

      A prepackaged Chapter 11 bankruptcy for GM is an option that has been floated consistently in op-ed pages, but it would be a risky move for the faltering auto giant. A prepackaged Chapter 11 filing in a different era would have allowed GM to restructure, protect itself from creditors and emerge leaner and more financially sound. But as The New Republic's Jonathan Cohn recently wrote, in order to become productive while in bankruptcy protection, GM would need to be able to buy materials and parts from suppliers on credit through Debtor-in-Possession loans. The current credit climate makes it unlikely that GM would find creditors willing to lend the funds necessary to continue operations. In this case, GM would be forced into a Chapter 7 situation -- total liquidation.

      A government bailout of GM is the most viable solution to the crisis, but if Congress extends a lifeline it must be predicated on the condition that GM and others commit to systematic reform. Nelson Lichtenstein, a labor historian at the University of California, Santa Barbara, says the most pragmatic and progressive arrangement would be for a bailout of this sort to occur under the premise of "socially democratic planning" that would offer government loans to automakers as part of a larger economic recovery plan. Such a plan would include a jobs program like the New Deal-era Works Progress Administration, infrastructure projects and universal healthcare, which would alleviate many headaches for private enterprise. In return for government funds, the public sector should get equity in GM, a seat on its board, management oversight, a moratorium on golden parachutes for executives and ironclad agreements on fuel-efficiency standards. There should also be careful oversight of the administration of funds so that a bailout does not go toward propping up stockholders or allowing bond brokers to cash in on government investment.

      Such an arrangement is vital to the real economy and is especially important to the industrial base and what remains of well-compensated blue-collar work in America. Gary Chaison, a professor of industrial relations at Clark University, notes that one of the ugliest aspects of the continued debate over the Big Three has been a virulent, thinly cloaked antiworker narrative. Washington Post columnist Robert Samuelson recently wrote that a GM bankruptcy could serve as a reminder to all of the "social costs of...overpriced unionized labor." He and other finger-wagging pundits, politicians and free-market adherents have blamed unionized workers (with their solid wages and benefits) for their complicity in the crisis GM is facing.

      These arguments falsely vilify working people and stem from a superficial understanding of the modern automotive industry. Historically, the auto industry has provided good middle-class jobs that have come with high wages, impressive healthcare and pension benefits packages, disability and overtime pay -- the kinds of jobs that are in too short supply in today's economy. But in recent decades, much of GM's manufacturing has been moved to nonunion parts plants in the South, allowing the company to drive down labor costs by avoiding United Auto Workers strongholds in the industrial Midwest. This, coupled with last year's agreement by the UAW to swallow concessions on a two-tiered pay scale, has dramatically lowered labor costs for GM. The UAW has also agreed to take over retiree health costs in 2010. These concessions -- opposed by many union members for creating a divided workforce -- have allowed GM to close the labor cost gap significantly with foreign manufacturers like Toyota. Analysts estimate that the 2007 agreement has saved GM $500 million in labor costs since its signing, and the company is set to save $4 billion annually starting in 2010.


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    Marissa Colón-Margolies, a freelance writer living in Brooklyn, is a fall 2008 Nation intern.

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    How about a bigger change in direction.
    Posted by: wjfaust on Dec 2, 2008 3:18 PM   
    Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
    Rather than continue down the automobility path which will ultimately come undone, why not move our automakers into the mass transit business? We really don't need any more cars; we do need mass transit. Seems like there should be adequate transfer of skills and knowledge to building vehicles that actually have a future: locomotives, passenger and freight cars, buses, trollies, ... . After all, these automakers probably had something to do (directly or indirectly) with mass transit's demise. It only seems appropriate, in their more humble state, that they should take part in resurrecting it--without the massive executive salaries, bonuses, and perks of a private sector dinosaur.

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

    Let Them Sink
    Posted by: hilly7 on Dec 2, 2008 4:11 PM   
    Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
    Nobody seems to notice the 300 million dollar Russian Plant, GM's 3rd. It will eventually employee 170,000 Russians and cost 70,000 American jobs. Also forgotten is 1 Billion promised to build plants in South America. Wonder how many American jobs that will cost?

    Ford didn't have too bright of an ideal losing a lawsuit overseas working people overtime without paying overtimes wages. Ford was also in Russia before GM.

    Small business go out everyday and nobody cares. They are replaced with other suckers, a vicious cycle. Who knows, maybe some decent automotive manufacturers will replace the "Big 3".

    Let them get a taste of what they did to Tucker.

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

    Make them make durable cars.
    Posted by: AsteroidMiner on Dec 2, 2008 4:56 PM   
    Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
    Reference:
    book
    This book is very easy to read, but it is misclassified as
    "engineering." It is a popular level book.
    Did anybody notice how Diamler-Benz bought out Chrysler so
    they could ruin the Dodge Diesel? At 165 to 185 horsepower,
    that engine was medium duty, meaning it would go about 400,000
    miles. Dr. Z offered it in a choice of horsepowers, knowing that
    the average consumer is stupid enough to think that more
    horsepower means heavier duty. The end result is that Dodge
    makes that engine put out 325 horsepower, making it LIGHT
    duty, meaning that it will be worn out in only 100,000 miles. It
    won't do you any good to try to get less horsepower out of it by
    staying off the gas pedal. When the peak horsepower goes up, so
    does the idle horsepower. Now that the Dodge diesel is ruined,
    Diamler-Benz sold Chrysler. There is a Mack truck near here
    with 1.7 Million miles on without an overhaul. Mack doesn't
    make them that way any more because the drivers wanted more
    "efficiency." There is no possible way to make a heavy duty
    engine out of a medium duty engine. If you want a car that will
    go a million miles, buy an SAE Class 8 truck, like the tractor part
    of an 18 wheeler. To get insurance, you will have to put a
    camper on it so you can register it as a motorhome. There is no
    engineering reason why cars can't go a million miles between
    overhauls. It is purely that management won't allow it. It
    shouldn't cost more than 10% to 15% to make cars last 400,000
    miles instead of 100,000 miles. All you have to do is follow the
    SEA Class 6 reliability standards.

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

    Failure is imminent
    Posted by: edgeofnowhere on Dec 2, 2008 5:56 PM   
    Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
    Regardless of a "bailout" or not, the big 3 auto industry is doomed along with the rest of the US industrial remnants that have not been shipped overseas. The real problem is that the economic model that sustained the big 3 for so long -- consumption/obsolescence-- has played out. It no longer has the financial debt-based capital support that sustained it. A bailout might fund the poor worker's pension plans, but it ain't never gonna bring back "Motor City."

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

    Let Detroit Fail
    Posted by: Dboy on Dec 2, 2008 8:15 PM   
    Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
    We need new car companies, new ideas, new designs. These old companies are not capable of change. There's no reason to continue to reward these brain-dead executives. Let them fail so we can make room for the 21st century. Save Detroit? You ever BEEN to Detroit?

    dboy

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

    Clinging to junk
    Posted by: phindrup on Dec 2, 2008 8:40 PM   
    Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
    Chrysler in either 1927 or 29 built a coupe with advanced features. With the exception of I think — running on memory here — a vehicle called a Cord sometime in the thirties, this would be the last vehicle built in the US with any state of the art, let alone innovative content.
    The US car makers, along with those in Australia, got along by convincing the populations that these cars, built for local conditions, could not be matched by European vehicles. Of course it was nonsense that could not withstand two minutes of informed analysis.

    Up until the present time they have continued to turn out crap. The much vaunted Chevy Volt, a plug-in hybrid GM engineers hope will be able to go forty miles on one charge . . .

    Says it all really! In no other country would it be given column space on a motor page, anyone suggesting it was a ‘green’ answer to anything would be treated with contempt. ‘Designed’ by incompetents who have no knowledge, no idea, no concept of what is required in a fuel efficient car, it is simply more US crap being unloaded upon a gullible public.

    The Indian designed Tata Nano is probably the leading edge design in fuel efficient cars at this stage.

    If the ‘big three’ go under, and the employees lose their entitlements then the directors, past and present ought to be prosecuted, stripped of their assets and jailed — or tossed out on the streets in only the clothes that they stood up in.

    (Just why companies that offer superannuation and health care as part of a salary package were/are not compelled to turn the money over to a completely independent investment entity is beyond my comprehension.)

    By the time the financial mess plays out, cars will be of no interest to US citizens, anyway. Scraping the money together to buy a burro will be the height of expectations. US citizens will be crossing into Mexico and heading further south hoping to find a job that enables them to send a little money home to the family.

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

    divide and sell to stimulate new robust green economy
    Posted by: zorro on Dec 3, 2008 1:42 AM   
    Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
    capitalism is supposed to be about competition--a competitive market breeds innovation. if we baul them out we virtually stifle innovation--because like the oil companies they are entrenched in their old filthy ways.

    Most of these bg-businessess outsource labor, criminalize workers and unions and live high on the hog while exploiting workers--eating away at benefits and wages--by destroying unions. Why shold we pay for it twice, three times...? This is welfare for the rich--we are the slave class.

    They should suffer for what they have done, just as any small or medium size company would do. They need sell off the companies in parts so that there are many small and medium car companies--leaner, meaner, greener! And they can grow. Any new technology, such as lithium battery develepment will have to included the rights of sale.

    If we bail them out, those companies should be owned by the people under strict directives to advance green fuel-efficient technology. they could function as some-kind co-op monitered and regulated by the people. Or like mentioned above, all or large portions of the industry should be re-directed toward green mass transit industries--government and privately owned--super mag-lev trains, trollies, wind-tunnels (vacuum tubes)....socialism is the only sustainable way of the future. We already have it for the rich--welfare for the rich--all major industries are subsidizes by the governemnt--esp. war. That means the billionare rich are subsidized--not the workers who make it work--and they the billionare thieves go on vaction with our money. They been stealing it from us for centuries and then knifing us in the back and we say oh-yessuh, that's good sir--i like it like that! Pathetic! Revolution now! Socialism now!

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

    one more thing!
    Posted by: zorro on Dec 3, 2008 1:52 AM   
    Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
    The billionares pocketing all that worker exploited cash should be made to pay the workers out of their pockets and all remaining assets to cover pension. This includes the money made in the sale--all of it should go to the workerr. And training programs should be implemented by gov., NGO's, purchasing companies, and others...to help in the transisition tonew green skills at theri new jobs (for ssome or many) into the new green market created.

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

    BA
    Posted by: mnstra on Dec 3, 2008 1:17 PM   
    Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
    TOO BIG TO FAIL...........

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

    A Car That Is Stuck In Neutral
    Posted by: penobscotdziekuje@yahoo.com on Dec 4, 2008 9:52 AM   
    Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
    Congress refused to bailout the languishing auto industry last month, and now auto executives are back in Washington with a plan. Whether or not if they receive the money, the news isn't good even if a bailout is granted.
    The UAW can make all the concessions it wants (I call it a sacrifice) which will negate all the hard-won gains over time. What's at stake is clearly the survival of manufacturing jobs. Southestern Michigan and neighboring states will suffer massive unemployment and untold misery.
    Congress seems poised to grant the money which will help "Detroit" get out of neutral. The car needs a overhaul.

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

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