Nationalize GM -- Or at Least Think About It
With the U.S. government offering trillions of dollars in supports for the financial sector, it is startling to witness the casual way in which many policy makers and opinion leaders suggest the U.S. auto companies should be allowed to go bankrupt.
In considerable part, this attitude reflects an anti-union and anti-blue collar animus. It also reflects the diminished economic power of what was formerly known as the Big Three (General Motors, Ford, Chrysler).
The stakes are too high for policy to be influenced by misinformation and ideological bias. The auto companies need to be saved, on terms that protect workers and communities, and advance public objectives. Congress and the country should be debating those terms, not dithering with unrealistic discussions of bankruptcy or demands to reduce already shrunken union wages and benefits.
How can we look at these issues sensibly?
First, one must note the awesome disparity in treatment for the auto industry and Wall Street. Government agencies have thrown literally trillions of dollars at the financial sector, with very light conditions, and virtually no discussion of industry salary structures (aside from limited restraints on top executive compensation). By contrast, there has been endless fulmination about supposedly excessively generous wages for unionized auto workers, and much more severe financial and oversight conditions proposed for an industry bailout.
Second, the costs of inaction to support the auto industry dwarf the cost of a bailout -- even if much more than the requested $25 billion is needed. The industrial Midwest has already been hollowed out by deindustrialization. Auto industry bankruptcy would be a crushing blow. A complete collapse of the U.S. auto companies would cost 3 million jobs -- about 240,000 employees of the companies, a million supplier jobs, and 1.7 million jobs lost from the overall economic effect -- according to the nonprofit Center for Automotive Research. In this scenario, the federal government would lose $60 billion in tax revenues and other costs in the first year alone. Even assuming something less than a complete collapse, costs would be devastating. And, as economist Thomas Palley has noted, industry bankruptcies would dramatically worsen the financial crisis.
Third, the idea that United Auto Worker members are receiving exorbitant wages putting the U.S. auto companies at competitive disadvantage is a lie.
In general, the Japanese plants in the United States ("transplants") pay wages comparable to those at unionized U.S. facilities. This has been central to their anti-union strategy. In some recent years, workers at the transplants have actually made more than their counterparts at the Big Three, thanks to profit-sharing deals.
The Big Three employers do have nontrivial healthcare and pension "legacy" costs for retirees, and this is the main employee-related difference in cost structure (the other is more generous healthcare for current Big Three workers).
It is true that, historically, auto industry jobs have paid well. Going forward, however, this will be less and less true. The concessionary UAW 2007 contracts call for many new hires to start at $14 an hour, and the UAW is preparing to offer even further concessions.
Fourth, manufacturing wages and salaries don't contribute much to the cost of a car. Total labor costs are less than 10 percent of list price. If UAW workers donated their time and all savings were passed on to consumers, it would only lower the cost of a car by $2,400.
Fifth, although the Big Three have done just about everything possible over the last decades to undermine their strength -- including making disastrous long-term product mix choices, and fighting against fuel efficiency standards -- but the proximate cause of their desperate status is the economic crisis. It is not true, as has been frequently suggested, that the Japanese companies are doing just fine. Overall auto sales in the United States have fallen by more than a third in just a year, and Toyota, Honda and Nissan have seen drops of 27 percent, 22 percent and 35 percent. It is true that the Japanese companies have a stronger base and are better prepared to weather the storm. But the storm is pouring rain on everyone.
Sixth, bankruptcy is no answer for fixing what ails the industry. It is almost certainly true, as the industry argues, that consumers will refuse, or at least be very reluctant, to buy cars from a company in or recently emerged from bankruptcy. Would you?
But at least as important for those who want to see the industry aggressively adopt fuel efficient and zero carbon emission technologies is this: Bankruptcy would limit the automakers' flexibility, and make it much harder for them to make expensive, long-term investment decisions. This is particularly true while oil prices are depressed. Things were different six months ago (and likely will be again in the not-distant future), but right now the market signals are wrong for investments in energy efficiency.
Focusing on the imperative to rescue the industry, there are two rational policy responses.
One is to give the industry loans and other supports, with tight conditions. Under consideration now in Congress is an oversight structure that would give the government authority to veto any investment over $25 million. In contrast to the free hand given to Wall Street, this would help ensure government funds are not diverted into inappropriate purposes. The existing proposal would also require the government be paid back with interest, and/or the right to benefit from subsequent improvements in company share value.
But more should be done. There should be requirements that the bailout beneficiaries invest in energy efficiency and safety technologies, with demands that they do much more than required by existing law. To give them a level playing field, these improved standards should be adopted as law, and required of all auto companies. And protections should be built in to protect workers' interests -- a key objective should be to preserve good-paying jobs, not drive everyone to Wal-Mart wages
The second rational policy approach is simply to nationalize the companies. General Motors now has a market capitalization of $2.8 billion. Ford's market value is $6.1 billion. These are relatively small amounts compared to the $25 billion the companies are requesting -- and they are likely to come back for more later.
The government has certain advantages over the companies. It can access capital more cheaply, for example.
The biggest advantage of buying the companies is that it would enable the public to exert control over the companies commensurate with its investment. There would be no need to negotiate with management, or carefully monitor managerial actions, to review 9-point plans for viability, or create incentives to have them invest in fuel-efficient technology. It would make it possible to undertake long-term, transformative investments in R&D and new transportation technologies, irrespective of today's oil price.
It is true that nationalizing the companies implies a commitment to support them despite unknown future challenges. But a commitment of $25 billion itself implies a readiness to do more if necessary, as it likely will be.
On the other hand, nationalizing the companies would entail many complications and difficulties, including managing relations with workers and plants around the world, fair dealing with suppliers and workers at suppliers, and the inherent complexity of running multinational auto companies.
Is a true nationalization the best option? Maybe, maybe not.
But the public would be a lot better off if there could be a serious discussion of the reasonable policy choices, and a lot less breath wasted on overt and disguised attacks on unionized blue-collar workers.
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15 Comments so far
Show AllIf my tax money is bailing out the big 3…
December 9, 2008 – 11:12 pm
I propose we create a place where my new business partner (the federal government) will listen to people’s strategies and ideas… As an entrepreneur, I have a few that should knock some sense into the moronic management that drove GM, Ford and Chryslter into the ground to begin with. So here is what I would suggest:
1. Hire Jonathan Goodwin (view article), the man who can get 100 miles per gallon out of a lincoln, cut emissions 80%, double the horsepower, make a hummer run on a bio-diesel engine and innovate in using air-pressur charges as the power source of an engine. I want Jonathan Goodwin’s friends running strategies on what to do with every single car GM, Ford or Chrysler builds…
2. Revive the electric car (EV1) and get every person involved in the “Who killed the electric car” movie – and I mean everyone!!! - a job in re-launching and selling this car. Give them incentives to open their dealerships and offer services on the electric car.
3. Ask Big Oil to “pitch in” on the bailout money or to go fuck themselves…
4. Sign a conract with IDEO to revamp the dash of every single car– IDEO is the most prestigious design company in the US – and Ford has the most boring, unchangeable, unoriginal dash. They all do…
5. Fire every lobbysts firm currently under contract by GM-Chrysler-Ford whose job is to influence congress into any change-resisting strategy. In other words, if you ever lobbyied against mandatory 40mpg fuel standards, YOU’RE FIRED!
6. Offer scholarships to every kid with high math and science scores to go to Engineering schools. At least 1 billion of the bailout money goest to scholarships for engineering majors – hell, even a new degree in “automobile engieneering?” – lets maximize on our talent in positive ways.
7. Encourage anyone going into law-school to apply for the engineering scholarship instead – we already have too many fucking lawyers and not enough engineers.
8. Force a paycut “across the board” to all union workers and management – 30% across the board for everyone. Max-out the top salary of ANYONE at whatever it is Jonathan Goodwin wants – by the way, I don’t know the guy, but I got a hunch…
9. Get everyone involved with “greasecar.com” a job – EVERYONE.
10. Have Jonathan Goodwin, his friends, the Electric Car movie people, IDEO and Greasecar.com people meet every month and talk about innovation.
11. Make sure there is an “entrepreneurial contest” for better mechanics on every car – put an ad of this contest in the superbowl and make sure mecanics, engineers and entrepreneurs with additional ideas / opportunities have a shot at presenting their proposals and ideas.
12. Find top people at Honda, Toyota, Ferrari, BMW, Audi and Mercedes Benz – particularly people on their board – and get them over here. These people should be on that meeting mentioned in point 10.
13. Tell Big Oil to go fuck themselves…
14. Give a few of that money to motorcycle and truck industries (Mack, Harley, etc.) and make them better as well…
15. Hire Doc Brown, build a flex-capacitor travel 20 years into the future and see the Honda and Toyota brands under GM, Ford and Chrysler
16. Travel back to 1985 with Jonathan Goodwin and avoid this whole mess in the first place…
Jerry Wells wrote "To "nationalize" implies merely government or state control or ownership of an industry or company. Once the company is viable again with massive subsidies, corporate capital will again attempt to cheaply privatize the enterprise for another cycle of economic plunder and destruction of the enterprise and it's employees. The drive to maximize profits means to minimize wages, benefits, retirement, safe working conditions, etc. Capitalism is the historic the enemy of working people and society at large.
To "socialize" an enterprise, industry, or resource (such as oil) is to forever end the parasitic involvement of corporate capitalism. The socialized industry is to operate to fill a need of society for products and services."
It is now obvious that socialization of the country is the only thing that is going to bale it out. Capitalism has failed miserably and turned a democratic idea into a overpopulated hypocracy. The pain that is being felt now will be equal to the amount of time those people that will resist the idea of socialism and realize that socialism is the only thing that will work now. We need to revisit the concept of the corporation as an individual. We also need to look to the Nordic countries, Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Denmark for templates of the future.
Detroit (American) auto companies are in trouble because of laws made by that same gang of Poohbah's they are asking for help from and everyone there knows it but will not mention it . The fine print in those FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS allow the foreign companies to pay lower wages , no taxes , sell for less , and sneak in complete vehicles with the assembly parts . (Check our sea ports and watch the ships arriving) The bottom line is the war on unions . Detroit is the last stronghold of the American unions and if people cannot get loans to buy , Detroit will be out of business first because they are the only business not supported by their government . This is by design and the MSM is doing a good job of brainwashing the public . Without the voice of the people what will our political landscape look like ? This is a very old game being played out before our eyes . The People v The Corporatist .
December 3, 2008 (LPAC)--Lyndon LaRouche today dismissed the
political acrobatics going on in Washington this week around a
proposed "bail out package" for the U.S. auto industry
as "escapism," noting that none of the proposals coming from
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Sen. Leader Harry Reid are going
to work.
"There's not going to be a rescue of the auto industry," LaRouche
stated. It's unsalvageable in its current form. Those on Capitol
Hill and elsewhere who are discussing this are escaping from the
real issue of the global sytemic collapse underway. What they are
proposing will not work. The only thing that will work is a
return to my policy from 2005, which is to use the machine-tool
capabilities in the former auto sector to launch infrastructure
projects and job creation under conditions of bankruptcy
reorganization of the whole financial system."
"Pelosi and her banker friends like Felix Rohatyn," LaRouche
continued, "sabotaged my policy in 2005 and 2006, and what Pelosi
is engaging in now is auto-eroticism. Anything other than my
policy is a waste of time and money, and pure b.s. If you want to
help the U.S. economy," LaRouche said,"dump Pelosi."
In his Nov. 18 internation webcast, LaRouche also addressed the
auto issue, as follows:
"For example, the question will come up; it comes up all over the
place: Shouldn't we go back to making automobiles again? No! I
fought for that back in 2005, and early 2006. The Congress of the
United States killed the idea of saving the automobile industry,
when I was about to save it. They killed it in February of 2006:
Now, the same idiots, who killed the automobile industry and
destroyed it in February 2006, are now saying they're going to
come back and start producing automobiles again, having destroyed
the market for, and the ability to produce automobiles! Simply
because people want to manufacture automobiles, there's a form of
fantasy life now! There's no sense for the United States to go
back into the automobile industry, not at this time. It's insane!
But it's attractive to people who don't think."
"Why are the people who shut down the auto industry, in February
2006 when I was working to save it, or save part of it, and save
the industry, as well as the automobile production--why do they
want to start it up now? They shut it down! The present Speaker
of the House was one of those who shut it down! She says she's
now promoting it! Did she change her mind? Did she change some
other things? It's all fakery."
"What we need now, is not U.S.-produced automobiles--the Japanese
are doing a fine job of more than filling all our requirements.
There is an excess of automobile production, en masse, throughout
the world! Why are we going back into the automobile
manufacturing business? To produce vehicles we can't sell? Just
to look at them?"
"Well, let's try something else: Let's take the highways around
here. What's the congestion: How much time do you lose every day
in commuting to work in the Washington, D.C. area? What is it,
two hours commuting for you? Two and a half hours each way? What
are the tolls you pay on these routes? How much of your personal
life is lost by this commuting--as opposed to what you would
have, if you had a high-speed rapid-transit system network to
transport you, without having to drive the car, without having to
smell the other guy's gas, ahead of you. You're getting sick."
"How would you like to have more time for family life? If you're
spending five hours a day commuting, what kind of family, if you
have two adults, both working, and some children: What kind of a
family life are you creating, for Americans with that kind of
arrangement? Shouldn't we have, instead of all these automobiles
on the highway, with all these tolls, and all these fumes to
smell from the automobile in front you--wouldn't it be better to
get a shorter, and faster transportation system? And to have a
better family life? Maybe a few hours a day saved, for some kind
of normal family life, not wondering what your children are doing
all these crazy hours?"
"Don't we have a shortage of clean power sources? Don't we have a
shortage of investment in manufacturing things that we need,
which we're wasting on this sort of stuff?"
"And, do you have clean water? Do any of you remember the time,
you could get safe, fresh water, out of a city water system, from
a tap? Do you remember when that was? How many bottles of bottled
water do you drink a day? How much does it cost you? How much did
it used to cost you, the same amount of water, safely out of a
tap?"
"So, what you need--the conditions of life and the conditions of
production; we have a shortage of infrastructure in this country,
of basic economic infrastructure."
cruxpuppy sez: "Anti-trust legislation failed to stop the uncompetitive influence of the corporate beast among us."
***
Legislation is useless without the means to enforce it. Since fascism came into vogue in the U.S., the corporations have written the legislation and pushed it through their malleable representatives in what used to be The People's house. Prior laws unfavorable to the corporations are not scrapped or rewritten, which risks calling attention, but are simply ignored.
Precedent: Hitler never overturned the Weimar Constitution. But neither did he observe it.
There is such a thing as a market that works. Don't call it a "free market", because the corporations destroyed it by the end of the 19th Century. The rich and powerful corporations have conspired to kill competition. That is why there are the "Big Three Automakers" in the US and no others. They have crushed every start-up that has come on the scene and killed innovation. Anti-trust legislation failed to stop the uncompetitive influence of the corporate beast among us.
GM has a long history of criminal anti-competitive practices. Each of the big three does. Since Congress allowed them to become the only game in town, this practice has become global so that auto making is an international private club. They ignore innovation in favor of the bottom line: all of them do. They control the market and they have worked hand in glove with the oil companies to guarantee a steady demand for oil, when innovation would have created fuel efficient vehicles and electric vehicles.
Computer technology has evolved in a competitive market, but in the automotive industry we are still using typewriters by comparison. We drive antique technology, most of us, because it has been most profitable for the corporate auto cartel and the oil companies to keep things that way.
And now we're asked to bail out this corrupt, inefficient, half-assed industry? Please! And these bastards have the temerity to blame labor? Oh Please!!!!
Let the bastards go into bankruptcy as a temporary expedient and make room for the start-ups. Let American technical genius free of the grip of the corporate monsters. Enforce competition in the auto industry! Why give these slimeballs billions when you could hand out loans of $1 billion to 25 different start-ups that would put efficient and powerful vehicles on the road at reasonable cost?
Do not underwrite the corruption and criminal anti-competitive practices of the "Big Three"! Now is the time to bring the auto market back to life. The government can't build cars, but it can regulate. The failure of the government to regulate the market and protect it from the Big Three is the fundamental cause of the failure of the auto market.
So let me get this straight. After all those decades of phoney patenting and frivolous corporate lawsuits GM slaps against real innovations and inventions, you want to "nationalize" it ? I say let that bastard die and rot in hell where it belongs !
SO when will Obama reach out to Amtrak for a change? If he really meant change, he'd be letting the Big 3 die off and giving public transportation a big boost and expanding it for a CHANGE WE CAN REALLY BELIEVE IN ! I am already disappointed he wrote off Texas but if he keeps this up, he can kiss my vote goodbye.
If we nationalize it, we would own all of those patents that they bought up so they wouldn't see the light of day. Then they could be made viable.
Watch out--if the government doesn't buy up the Big Three, there is one corporate sector that has a motive and more than enough cash on hand to do it--the oil companies. If they decide to take over the manufacturing end, we'll never see a move away from oil burners.
Writing in The Progressive 21 November 2008, Mark Brenner and Jane Slaughter, two left-labor economists, remind us about the precedent during WWII when the government converted the capacity of the auto industry to an alternative purpuse (http://www.progressive.org/mp/slaughter111908.html). They point out how no cars were built after 1942 until the end of the war, while the auto industry built planes, tanks, rails, locomotives, generators, and bombs. This time they can build wind turbines, rails, innovative low carbon cars, and, for the next decade or so, more of the passanger vehicles that are not about to disappear. It is amazing how much gleeful crap we read about the benefits of destroying 3 million good jobs and breaking the back of organized labor. For an insight in how autoworkers earn decent wages, see the poetic monologue at www.autoplant.info.
To "nationalize" implies merely government or state control or ownership of an industry or company. Once the company is viable again with massive subsidies, corporate capital will again attempt to cheaply privatize the enterprise for another cycle of economic plunder and destruction of the enterprise and it's employees. The drive to maximize profits means to minimize wages, benefits, retirement, safe working conditions, etc. Capitalism is the historic the enemy of working people and society at large.
To "socialize" an enterprise, industry, or resource (such as oil) is to forever end the parasitic involvement of corporate capitalism. The socialized industry is to operate to fill a need of society for products and services.
The destructive "competition" to forever maximize profit at the expense of employees and society is eliminated. The workers of the enterprise have internal control of production and management and work in co-operation with other such enterprises and the needs of society to co-ordinate production of goods and services.
Such enterprises have struggled to exist in hostile economic environments. In Argentina, where capitalism collapsed and business owners abandoned their factories, some factories were seized by their workers and went back into business. Hugo Chavez in Venezuela has nationalized the oil industry to the benefit of the poorest in the country. Some 800 (?) businesses have been "socialized" and put under some form of worker ownership/management.
Such socialized attempts should not be looked upon as a temporary fix for bailing out corrupt capitalists. Rather it should be looked upon as a small first step towards the transition from a capitalist economy to a socialist economy.
Such a transition to socialism is now essential for the survival of humanity. Wars for profit will continue forever until the profit motive is taking out of the war industry. Global warming will never end as profit making polluters are allowed to stay in business. National financial institutions and banking system should be nationalized for the benefit of society and not for corrupt capitalist plunder.
Here is a final thought - a link to WSWS:
US Congress, Big Three, UAW conspire against auto workers
3 December 2008
by Jerry White
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2008/dec2008/pers-d03.shtml
"...
The most fundamental question, however, is how are the vast industrial resources, built up by generations of workers, going to be preserved and used? The auto industry, upon which millions of working people depend, can not be left in the hands of corporate executives and big investors who have driven it into the ground in order to amass huge personal fortunes.
Without plug-in hybrid vehicles to sell to customers the auto industry is dead. The IEA is predicting a decline in world oil production of 6-9% yearly over the next ten years. This is conservative compared to the 15% decline in Mexico's Cantarel field in the last year alone.
So with thirty to fifty percent of the gas gone by 2015 there isn't much hope of selling enough cars to keep GM alive as a private company. Wild price swings in stocks and gasoline prices shouldn't inspire many people to go into debt $35K for your average GM vehicle either.
The auto industry is a dead fish. Can we at least use the body to fertilize the transition to rail?
Fighting the forces of rather dim lighting wherever they may be found!!
The problem of nationalization is that it gives the companies to the government, not to the people. Imagine politicians like Bush/Cheney gaining control of these companies.
Let's buy the companies, as a nation, pennies on the dollar, but give each American citizen an equal share of non-transferable stock in these companies that would give each of us equal dividends when these become profitable and an equal voice in yearly shareholder's meetings.
What better and more democratic way to spread the wealth without politician/lobbyist interference?
ezeflyer:I shall consider your idea, but I disagree with politicians controlling are always bad concept. That's what the line was about single payer, medicare/medicaid....Medicare does fine as a government program. I don't want stock, personally. Wow:imagine the stockholders meetings in your plan. But all ideas are to be considered.
Bush/Cheney did their best to kill Medicare, Social Security, etc.. We the People didn't let them. Having equal shares of stock in your public lands, public airwaves, public transportation, public mineral resources, public healthcare system, etc. guarantees that We the People will receive the dividends, not Bush/Cheney cronies and potential despots.
Let's do the reverse of privatization. Let's buy the companies, as a nation, pennies on the dollar. Make a real American car. Make sure the sale includes all the electric car data/plans that were hidden when the electric cars that had been leased by, was it GM?, were recalled and destroyed. What's the name of that documentary who killed the electric car? Research. The US government has spent billions over the decades on research that was then given away to private industry:drug research and all kinds of technology. Let's do reverse of what was done before: the government built the railroads or subsidized it heavily, giving away the land, then gave it back to industry in the days of the robber barons. Look at the history of Amtrack. Let's give the public a break for a change. And don't forget the French designed air car that was all over the internet/YouTube during the summer.