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The Nasty Class and Anti-Union Bias of Auto Bailout Opposition
Nancy Pelosi says the Congressional Republicans are playing Russian Roulette with the economy by refusing to agree to an auto industry bailout.
But for that metaphor to work, you have to add that they've loaded the gun with six bullets.
The only hope is that someone -- Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson or Federal Reserve Chair Ben Bernanke -- will come in and prevent the trigger from being pulled. Luckily, it appears they are ready to do so. A statement from the Bush administration this morning signaled that it would find a way to keep the Big Three automakers in business until next year, when a more comprehensive bailout and industry restructuring package can be worked out.
What is remarkable about the Senate Republican refusal to agree to a $15 billion loan deal for the auto industry is that they are not serving any corporate interest. A collapse of the U.S. auto industry would be bad not just for the Big Three, and the supplier networks and auto dealers, but pretty much every sector of the economy, including Wall Street.
Earlier this week, U.S. Chamber of Commerce President and CEO Thomas J. Donohue urged that "Congress must immediately authorize bridge loans to America's carmakers to prevent the collapse of the U.S. auto industry and the devastating impact it would have on the economy, American workers, and national security."
The motives for the Republicans appear to be narrow political calculation that the public is tired of industry bailouts (a foolish political read, because if the Republicans permit the auto industry to fall into recession-worsening bankruptcy, they will pay a political price for at least a generation); a hypocritical claim that they oppose government intervention in the economy (contradicted by everything from Republican-approved state tax breaks for Honda and Toyota assembly plants to Ted Stevens' earmarks, from public insurance and loan guarantees for the nuclear industry to subsidies for weapons exporters); and a vicious anti-unionism and anti-working class bias.
The Republicans say the failure to reach a Congressional deal on the auto bailout rests with the United Auto Workers, who refused to reduce wage scales to match those of non-unionized workers in Japanese auto company plants in the United States.
Actually, Japanese plant wages have always been close to those of the UAW, and the UAW has agreed to cut wages for many new workers almost in half -- with many new jobs starting at $14 an hour. (GM says that, for these new hires, overall per-employee costs will decline from the totally misleading $78 per hour to $26 an hour.) But there's no logic in chasing non-union wages down as a way to be competitive, because the non-union employer can always unilaterally lower them below those reached through collective bargaining.
There is a special cruelty and nastiness in the idea that unionized auto workers, who do very dangerous, physically demanding work with minimal opportunity for creative expression, are excessively compensated or enriched by unreasonably generous health insurance plans.
Here are a few points of comparison with an industry where physical demands and workplace safety hazards are minimal, and where white-collar employees brag about how they are free to be innovative. Like the U.S. auto industry, Wall Street has also fallen on very hard times due to spectacular mismanagement.
* Auto worker compensation makes up a small cost of manufacturing a car -- less than 10 percent. So, you can slash wages as much as you want, but you won't bring costs down much. By contrast, as you would expect in a service industry, compensation makes up a huge portion of costs for the financial sector. The New York state comptroller lists employee compensation costs as equivalent to more than 60 percent of 2007 revenue for the 7 largest financial firms headquartered in New York City. At Goldman Sachs, employee compensation made up 71 percent of total operating expenses in 2007.
* UAW contracts give workers the right to retire after 30 years of laboring, with pensions and healthcare. This week, Goldman Sachs announced that, given the hard times, it was considering raising its retirement requirement to the industry standard of the rule of 60 (from Goldman's current 55). Under that rule, you can retire with nice benefits after any combination of age and service totaling 60. So, if you've done 15 years service at age 45, you're eligible.
* In 2007, average wage and benefit costs per employee at Goldman Sachs were $661,490. Even using misleading and wildly inflated auto industry claims, UAW workers cost $150,000 a year.
* Congress has allocated $700 billion to bailout Wall Street, but the overall total is higher by an order of magnitude. Including all of the loans, investments, swaps, guarantees and more, the federal government (including the Federal Reserve) has doled out more than $7 trillion to Wall Street. The auto industry said it was looking for $34 billion, Congress was debating $15 billion, and analysts say the auto companies might ultimately need something like $100 billion.
Most of those funds -- for both Wall Street and Detroit -- are various kinds of loans that will be paid back, many accompanied by the right to make money if beneficiary stock prices rise in the future.
But some of the money for Wall Street is almost certain to be lost. Notably, the government has agreed to accept losses up to $250 billion on a $306 billion pool of Citigroup mortgage-related assets that are certain to show major losses. So, the government is on the hook to Citigroup, with the certain prospect of enormous losses that are likely to be more -- just for this one financial behemoth -- than the total amount the auto industry will seek in loans.
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33 Comments so far
Show AllLook at the per centages for labor costs in the auto industry vs the financial industry.
This points to the true agenda of union-busting by Republicans. If Japan is the benchmark for wages, the Democrats need to demand that the for the next round of banker bailouts that the typical wages and benefits paid for comparable Japanese workers in the financial industry be adopted by firms looking for cash.
Based on the per cents in this article, I suppose the money would go, at a minimum, twice as far.
Democrats were the ones voted for the Bankers' Bailout. More than half of House Republicans voted against the Bankers' Bailout. In case you haven't noticed, the Democratic Party has been owned by the bankers since at least FDR. What the heck is "bank holiday" anyway? Banks promised redemption on demand, now you want your money back but the bank doesn't have it, so the government steps in on behalf of the bankers and tell you to buzz off. That's what government declaring "bank holiday" means. Republicans used to represent manufacturers, since the time of Lincoln (who waged a war to raise tarrifs on imports) . . . but with the decline of manufacturing industry in the US, the Republican Party has also been heavily infiltrated by the banking interest in the last few decades. Read the list of top donors to both Obama and McCain . . . you will quickly realize who owns them, and what kind of agenda is most likely forthcoming, while you are being distracted by the meaningless partisan bickering.
What has Obama said?
Nothing right?
What can he say? Sorry? I'll fix it when I'm in the oval office? Whatever he could say would be just words at the moment. He isn't just sitting back waiting 'till Jan. 21st. He's probably got more plans on the table now than gwb had four years in.
Yes! We will have to wait for Jan 21st, unless Bush gets an attack of conscience--not likely!
Ray Berthiaume
The MSM & Pat Robertson continue to claim that autoworkers make $70/hr. Where can we get the truth spoken in this article?
According to CBC the big 3 pays $28 per hour plus $26 benefits and $16 legacy costs for a $70 total. The Japanese manufacturers pay $26 an hour plus $20 benefits and $3 legacy costs for a $49 total. Excluding legacy costs the differential is $54/$46.
Fortunately our media explain rather than merely follow the talking points. BTW Canada and Ontario have already agreed to a bailout of $3.3 billion, or 20% of what the US provides, to support the Canadian part of the big 3.
If the US had health care and public funding of pensions, they could still be competitive..
Well said RK,
The true agenda of this government is to break Americas financial back, union busting, low wages, massive debt, easy access to credit cards over the last 30 years, no regulation on interest earned by banks, 28 percent.
They want us broke so they can get rid of money world wide and usher in the new world order financial system of computer credits.
This all plays well if you throw in the ability to stop terrorists from getting access to money/credits.
Total global control and World security using a debit credit card system.
Is there any doubt what so ever that 9/11 was an inside job by the new world order to start a chain reaction of events which leads to a new financial system that screams for world security.
BornFreeMen
Follow the money and motive.
Yup - it's all the "workers'" fault, just like the exploding housing Ponzi bubble is all the fault of that small percentage of low-income earners who were lied into unaffordable loans for overpriced homes, just like it was Saddam's fault millions of innocent Iraqis were killed and maimed because he wouldn't let the inspectors in, just like Katrina was the fault of them dam homos...
Wonder if we can find a way to blame the homeless for global warming...
this right here is SUPERCAPITALISM at work:
the SHOCK DOCTRINE of DISASTER ECONOMICS working ===
where the economic debacle and bailout scenario is BLAMED on "UNIONS" (as a signal to americans that UNIONS are BAD, BAD BAD) -- so that americans will ACCEPT what NO UNION america is :
PROGRESSIVELY lower and lower and lower wages.
THAT"s the "reform" these EVIL people are after.
and that is the "reform" they seek by taking advantage of the "SHOCK" that the impending industry collapse opens up.
THIS is CAPITALISM as its most essential:
HUMAN LABOR pushed lower and lower and lower by using a SHOCKING situation to Force "reform". and by the time there is any recovery and PROFITS -- the LABOR power has been REDUCED to even LESS than it was BEFORE. and what do you get?
CLOSEr and CLOSEr to third world country SLAVE WAGES!
that is the nature and eventual PURPOSE of capitalism. it is NOT surprising that with these debacles in the USA -- the VERY HEART of supercapitalism that they are being applied WHOLESALE upon workers..wether it is in "cutting the work force" , or reducing benefits, or weakening unionism.
they are ALL designed to DIMINISH the power and rights and wages of working people of EVERY segment except the very top and the cronies and those lucky enough to be in highly specialised necessity jobs where the replacements are far too rare.
this is something that will spread to just about every profession - blue collar or white collar - or lower economic class.
it is inherent in CAPITALISM. ESPECIALLY the USA model of it.
it is exactly what the writer Klein of "SHOCK DOCTRINE" has talked about.
Frank said:
"Wonder if we can find a way to blame the homeless for global warming..."
Maybe you can help me here, Frank. Does farting outdoors create or contribute to global warming? If so, we can blame them!
.Well, some claim that cattle contribute to the large amounts of methane released though just such bodily activity. But it isn't just the homeless who expel such gases in public.....Something about this topic reeks....;-}
.
We see things, not as they are, but as we are.
Anais Nin
It's all the heat they lose from their bodies sleeping outside without coats.
Joe
CRA$$ WARFARE
Rubber Question$ Won't Fell Big Game Lie$
--LOAD for BEAR!
http://www.bcx.org/photos/art/artgen/?file=ArtistGeneral20080801_10_1684BCX.jpg
Demok supporters, today you implement socialism for the elites, capitalism for the people. Before the O'Bama chimp was selected for the oval orifice, you opposed this class war aggression, this socialism for elites, capitalism for people. You opposed this aggression because your competitors for the throne, the Repuks, supported it. The Demoks and Repuks have flip/flopped into each others' prior political position. You, Demoks, are now in line for the throne. Your sponsors are the elites with their hands on the control levers, and today you do their bidding. The Repuks are opposing business as usual now because business as usual is now the Demoks' responsibility. So we all see how this game is played. The emperor wears no clothes today. YOU, Demok supporters can't embrace any principles that support the people, because you are obligated to do the bidding of the elites and the Repuks are opposing you, claiming to support the people of course, while we know that BOTH Demoks and Repuks are the handmaidens of the elites. God Bless the United Racketeers of America!
At least the auto industry PRODUCES something tangible. You can SEE what you get for your money. Their products are a necessary item to be figured into the family budget. If the time an effort spent to 'stabilize' Wall Street had been spent in reintroducing viable manufacturing in this country so that there would be jobs available the economy might have had a shot in the arm. There wasn't any bailouts for the furniture industry, the factories, the wood suppliers, the finish and hardware suppliers. There weren't any bailouts for the textile industry. They all simply vanished overnight. It would have been nice if someone at the helm had proposed a few incentives for these industries to stay afloat at home. But, then their lobbies probably weren't large enough for influential enough. If the same rebates that go to big oil and agribusiness would have gone to other now defunct industries it may have made a difference. Hopefully someday someone in our Congress will have the foresight to begin planning a sustainable, longterm future for this country.
Finance capitalists these days care nothing for country. The world is their playground. They have been sending jobs abroad for decades. They go where labor is cheapest, rules are weakest. The concept of giving back is the only thing that is foreign to them.
Their patriotism is hollow. They use it to sell us fear and weapons, to keep us deluded and distracted.
For the sake of our country, it would be a wonderful idea to revitalize local manufacturing. We could make things like non-toxic toys and other quality goods. We could make reasonable cars and more mass transit. We would have more employed people to buy them. We could have reasonable wage differentials between CEO's and labor. As we try to buy local for ecological reasons, we would save on transportation costs and carbon footprints.
Instead of 50 pieces of toxic plastic shipped half way around the world from China, a child could have a few quality items made right here in the unionized factory in which Mommy works.
But I dream.
Joe
Joe you do dream but what you dream is very possible. My dream is that there will come a day when people will have the confidence (which is power) to tell corporations to go to hell. If that were to happen it would be all over. They (The business elite/gangsters) have the money but we have the numbers.
It's a wonderful dream, jclientelle.
How many hours have you spent on digging potato from your own backyard? The Manhatten farmers were really mad when Erie Canal brought midwest farm products to New York City.
Huh?
Joe
Don't dream. Start local and fight it on up and get others on your side. Believe me, you can do it !
"The Republicans say the failure to reach a Congressional deal on the auto bailout rests with the United Auto Workers, who refused to reduce wage scales to match those of non-unionized workers in Japanese auto company plants in the United States."
How fortunate for Congressional Republicans that there's only one federal congress in this country......otherwise, "We The People" might have to insist they reduce their wages to compete with a Japanese Congress.
That would be the "ultimate" payback!
.This idea is actually a very good one. If our Legislators were held to the average benefits of the American worker, pension and health care copays included, we might quickly see a move to reform such.
.
We see things, not as they are, but as we are.
Anais Nin
The Federal Reserve has 100's of financial anaylst . Were the banks told to dry up lending to the surprise of the Federal Reserve ? Allen G. did say he was shocked . Something set this in motion almost suddenly . The Southern States are expecting several more foreign auto assembly plants to locate there so if Detroit fails the South will certainly have risen again industry wise . This seems to have been done by design and may have been set in motion too early , before the next administration . The bank bail out money was probably to prop up the banks until this charade is over .
Let's not get lost in the details. The purpose of a bridge loan is to help the big 3 help themselves. There is no reason to believe that they will because they did not give any reason for us or the Congress to believe that they will be successful after receiving the loan. The reason they need the loan is that they are FAILING.
I see you CD lefties were against "corporatist" bailouts until you were for them.
Let me get this staight, if a union like the UAW is involved: bailout good.
If a non-union company like AIG is involved: bailout bad.
.Let me get this straight. The opinion of someone like you, one who knows nothing whatsoever about the topic under discussion, nothing whatsoever about the varying opinions of those left of him, one who is subject to hyperbolic distortions of the topic and the opinions posted therein, one who comes here, not to enlighten but to disrupt and prove himself pretty darn dumb, is to be valued?
Rush back to Rush to get your latest prepackaged opinion.....
.
We see things, not as they are, but as we are.
Anais Nin
If you weren't such a total fucking moron, someone might try explaining to you the difference between the real economy and the financial economy.
--
Eric Patton
Cincinnati, OH
ebpatton@yahoo.com
http://www.new.facebook.com/people/Eric_Patton/663783881
Please look in the mirror before tossing cusswords around. Chapter-11 is not a big red button to activate a mushroom cloud rising from the basement of the factory floor. Chapter-11 is Bankruptcy Court Protection. Under such a Protection, the automakers can suspend interest payment to creditors. In the latest quarterly filing, GM lost $2.5billion; a big contribution to that was $1.7billion on interest payment in the same time period! Now if that interest payment can be suspended, GM would have a much better fighting chance at saving the jobs and improving carmaking in the long run.
A bailout of the Detroit-3 is in reality a bailout of the Wall Street bankers and junk bond kingpins. If the objective is to give the carmakers some relief on their cash flow stress, the most efficient way to do it is Chapter-11 filing; with the debt discharged, the companies will have room to liquidate some of the hundreds of thousands of cars rotting on the lots right now, and release some working capital.
Thos who think Bankruptcy filing equals elimination of all the jobs related to the companies are either ignorant or fear-mongering. Almost all the major airlines have gone through the Chapter-11 process; they are still flying because they come out stronger after the Bankruptcy process wipe off their old debts.
Go away - I'm too tired to answer this deliberately dense interpretation. Maybe tomorrow.
Joe
Here is another perspective on the likelihood of a "bail-out" regarding the auto-industry...
Assuming that you all know by now what derivatives are (best and shortest explanation came from Joe Stiglitz: "Excess leverage and a pyramid scheme" (gambling with borrowed money and "backing it up" with even more borrowed money)- think about the following scenario:
There are now only two big investment banks left: Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley. They both have been big players in the "derivatives" Ponzi scheme (banks betting against each other on the odds of credit defaults (not just mortgages but also credit risk of corporations) and "insuring" (to a third party, not the borrower! - that is why these schemes are so insane...) the default risk of thousands of loans with money they do not have, so they need more and more loans to feed the Ponzi scheme...
Let us assume one of them has "insured" a third party againt the credit default of GM (Chrysler, Ford or all of them). So if one (or all of them) can no longer pay their debts the "insurer" (issuer of a CDS) has to pay the CDS buyer a huge amount of money....
Let us further assume - just for the sake of the argument - that Goldman has bought CDS on "Detroit" and Morgan Stanley is the counterparty that sold the "insurance". In this case Goldman Sachs would WANT the big three automakers to go down (because of the huge profit) and Morgan Stanley would want them NOT TO FAIL because they would have to pay out the CDS....
For us normal people this kind of thinking may seem absurd (making profit from the bankruptcy of a corporation and not giving a damn about the lost jobs, etc.) but the "financial industry" has no longer room for moral constraints....
Derivates are just bets on what an "asset" will do and the banks betted with borrowed money created on computer screens (as it is lent). This virtual casino has lost touch with the real world: According to the BIS (Bank for Intl. Settlements) by the end of 2007, the "notional value" of derivative trades had reached: 681.000.000.000.000 $ - that is over 50 times the 13 trillion GDP of the entire US economy (calling this a financial "bubble" is an understatement, it is more a black hole...)
For a more detailed insight into the insane derivatives business (why the "FED" is not federal at all and more) I recommend this book:
http://www.webofdebt.com/