Townhall.com, Where Your Opinion Counts
Talk Radio:   Bill Bennett   Mike Gallagher   Dennis Prager   Michael Medved   Hugh Hewitt   
BREAKING NEWS  LeftArrow - Townhall.com : Conservative, Political, Republican   RightArrow - Townhall.com : Conservative, Political, Republican  
Columns, funnies & more in your inbox!
  • Check the boxes and send us your email address to receveive your free newsletter
  • Your daily must-read of conservative columns, cartoons and news. Coulter, Sowell, Krauthammer and more.
  • Townhall.com’s weekly inside scoop on what’s happening behind the scenes in the world of politics. When news breaks, we report.
  • Signup to receive the latest daily Townhall cartoons
Monday, November 17, 2008
Bill Steigerwald :: Townhall.com Columnist
Don't Bail Out the Big Three
by Bill Steigerwald
Vote on It:
Average Vote:
[+] Text [-]
 
Poll
Do you feel the leaked information from a global warming alarmist organization is meaningful?



Is the impending collapse of America's Big Three automakers the next "crisis" that must be solved by a massive federal bailout? Most politicians of a certain ideological or geographic bent think so. But Dan Ikenson, the associate director of the Cato Institute's Center for Trade Policy Studies, thinks GM, Ford and Daimler-Chrysler needs a shakeout, not a bailout. I talked to Ikenson Thursday, Nov. 13, by phone from his office in Washington.

Q: Does the auto industry deserve a bailout?

A: That's any easier question than "Will they get one?" The answer is "no." They definitely do not deserve a bailout. Taxpayers, first of all, should never be on the hook to bail out private companies. They should definitely not be on the hook to bail out companies that have made terrible decisions time and again. And that's what describes the Big Three: They've made bad decisions with respect to the products they make and they've made bad decisions with respect to their labor relations and the capitulations to the unions over the years that have really landed them with an uneconomic cost structure that makes it virtually impossible for them to compete going forward.

Q: What's the worst thing the auto industry has done to put itself in this fix?

A: Well, I don't knowhow to rank them, in particular. But two things strike me as particularly problematic. On the product side, management demonstrated an egregious failure of leadership by never envisioning the day when SUVS and big trucks would fall out of favor. In the 1980s, the Big Three made predominantly cars. And over a 20-year period they have shifted to predominately SUVs and trucks. I think in 2006 about 75 percent of Ford's output were big trucks and SUVs; slightly smaller for Chrysler and GM. Now those are high-profit margin cars for them, so I can understand why they would want to produce those. But you have to diversify your products and you can't just rely on trucks and SUVs.

If you look at the top-10 selling passenger cars this decade, the Big Three offerings make that list at slots 7, 8, 9, 10 occasionally. None of them has ever been in the Top 5 this decade. Those are always occupied by the foreign nameplate products - the Honda Accord, the Toyota Camry, the Nissan Altima. I don't know if we should start this story back in the 1960s and 1970s, when the Big Three never thought they were going to face competition from anybody else and therefore they could give lavish benefits to the unions and stop caring about the products they made, or if it is something that has happened more recently.

The other big problem they have is they agreed to these ridiculous work rules. At GM, you can't really lay off a worker and therefore reduce costs commensurately. Laying off a worker at GM requires that you pay 90 to 95 percent of their salary for the period of the contract. You've heard of these job banks where people are paid not to work. So if you're in an industry and you're facing contracting demand and you want to slow down your output, you can't really get the benefits of slowing output if labor is a fixed cost. You need to be able to cut your costs. The foreign nameplates can do that, but GM, Ford and Chrysler have been sort of crippled in that capacity.

Q: Have the Big Three been victimized to any special degree by either dumb or highly fallible government policies?

A One of the examples I'm hearing from proponents of the current bailout is, "Let's go back to 1979 when Chrysler was bailed out. That was a success story. Chrysler came out of bankruptcy and paid back the U.S. taxpayer with interest after four years." Well, to me, the fact that the government stepped in back then has been an enabling implicit guarantee for the Big Three ever since. Had Chrysler gone under back then, I am convinced that the unions would not have had as much power as they had during the 1980s, because they would have been dealing with two companies instead of three. So they would have had less leverage. So had Chrysler had gone under then, the "Big Two" might not be in the position that they are in right now.

Q: They'd be a lot healthier too, business-wise, because they'd be sharing parts of Chrysler's market share.

A: Exactly, and that's why I say we shouldn't need a bailout now. All we need is a little bit of a shakeout. If GM were to go under, those companies are going to get much larger market shares. Even though demand is contracting, getting increased market share in a contracting demand environment market still could translate into increased revenues.

Q: Is there anything GM, Ford or Chrysler can do right now to save themselves?

A: I don't know if there is anything they can do in the short run. If the government is going to help them out, if they are going to ask the government to do anything, they should ask the government to make sure that the unions don't get violent when the Big Three tell the unions they are severing their contracts. They need to go back to Square One with unions and say, "Look, we're either not going to deal with you at all or we're going to deal with you on much more realistic terms." You can't pay people not to work. The average compensation at GM is $75 an hour; at Toyota it's $47 an hour. If that fundamental issue is not addressed, there's no point in thinking much further into the future. There's just no way they are going to be able to compete. That's why I think the $25 billion bailout is a complete waste of money. It doesn't address the problem.

Q: If it is OK or necessary to give money to financial companies and banks to keep them from going under, why is it not OK to prop up GM or Ford?

A: My easy answer to that is that it wasn't OK to bail out the insurance giant (AIG) and the financial firms and the banks. I was opposed to that, as were my colleagues. One of the things that we saw happening was that this moral hazard was going to emerge and you were going to see industries throughout the country unleash their most powerful weapons on Washington - and that is their lobbyists. The lobbyists are lining up right now. There's a big pot of money here in Washington to be doled out and it's going to be doled out to the industries that make the sharpest cases - that push the right buttons, pull at the right strings.

To engage your question in a more treacherous manner, I think there is a distinction to be made between bailing out the financial system and bailing out a manufacturing industry. This country could survive without an auto industry at all. If the Big Three and the nameplates were gone, we would find a way to move forward. There would be some adjustment, but we don't need an auto industry in this country to survive. But I think we need access to credit, and I think we need banks. So in that regard I think that that industry is more important to us than the auto industry.

Q: What about the idea that if GM or Ford went under it would be an economic catastrophe because of all the lost autoworker jobs but also because of the effect it would have on all the businesses that service the auto industry?

A: Yeah. There is something to the argument. I think the Michigan congressional delegation; Gov. (Jennifer) Granholm and Center for Automotive Research are engaging in massive hyperbole here. They have anticipated a response like one that I have, which is, "Let's let one of them fail and see what happens." Their response to that is, "Well, one of them won't fail. If one fails, the other two go down -- and all the supply network and all the related jobs that go with them and then we're talking several million jobs."

I don't agree that that's going to happen. It's counter-intuitive. If one of them goes down, yes, some of the parts suppliers that supply one of them exclusively, GM for example, will be in trouble if GM goes down. But the parts suppliers that supply Ford and Chrysler will suddenly see their orders increase. So I don't buy the linkage that lands us in this situation where we lose 3 million jobs.

Certainly, there will be some job loss. But let's face it; this is an economic recession that we're entering. That's what happens when economies recede. Congress, the president, can not insulate every American from every form of pain. I'd like to be able to say that nobody is going to lose their job and their salaries will continue to rise in real terms, but that is not going to happen. If the government stays out, they will be sorted out. There will be some pain, but the pain will be more short-lived and the solutions will be determined more quickly.

Q: What should the government - the politicians, really - do about the current plight of the automakers?

A: I think there should be an announcement that this is a free-enterprise system; that the bailout of the financial industry was determined to be absolutely necessary for the well-being of the country because everybody needs credit, but we can not continue down this road rescuing every firm that is in trouble. First of all, we can not afford to do that; and secondly, that is unfair to those companies that have made the right decisions. If you subsidize the companies that have made the wrong decisions and that are not leading us into the future and that are not making the investments in the new technology, then you're explicitly penalizing companies like Honda, Toyota and Nissan because they've made the better decisions. In a competitive enterprise system, the ones that make the good decisions should rise to the top; the ones that make the bad ones should fail. That's really not the kind of action the government is going to take, because the government regrettably - the Congress - thinks its role is to buffer people from pain.

Q: So what do you think the government actually will do?

A: They're going to want to do something and in my view there will likely be a bailout. But I wouldn't call it a bailout. It's not a bailout. It's simply tossing money down a pit. The beneficiaries of that will be Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid, the Michigan congressional delegation, Gov. Granholm. They'll be able to say, "Look, we went to bat for you. Now do what you can with it." But in four or five months when they come back, it will be Barack Obama's chance to lay down his vision of what he wants to do - and hopefully demonstrate that he's not going to capitulate to these left-wing labor politics and say "No, we're not doing this. You were here four or five months ago. We gave you $25 billion. You just used it for operating expenses and prospects aren't good. Let's introduce you to the bankruptcy process."

Share:
Vote on It:
Average Vote:
 
About The Author
Bill Steigerwald, born and raised in Pittsburgh, is a former L.A. Times copy editor and free-lancer who also worked as a docudrama researcher for CBS-TV in Hollywood before becoming a reporter for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and a columnist Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. Bill Steigerwald recently retired from daily newspaper journalism..
 
TOWNHALL DAILY: Sign up today and receive Townhall.com daily lineup delivered each morning to your inbox.
No Lean
The problem with the 3 big car companies is they still practice JIT. And making cars and keeping inventory. Ever think about the Toyota way. It has been working for them.

Maybe it's stupid, but its my idea

Denise Location: LA
Reply # 69
Date: Nov 18, 2008 - 11:25 PM EST
Subject: Jim in CA
============

I don't think this makes any sense to me anymore, but I still insist I will not own a Jap car until they admit and apologize for the Rape of Nanking.

To officially say it didn't happen, when in fact many more people were tortured and killed by the two Atomic Bombs, and every year many people apologize for that.


Reward failure?
Giving the automobile industry goverment bailouts is like rewarding a losing football coach a contract extension because the general manager of the football team is his former roommate in college.

A Manmade Hurricane Katrina?
I lived through (and, actually, still don't have not seen the trees grow back or all hoiuses rebuilt). I spent 6 weeks in Dallas. I paid my own hotel bills, my own food bills, the bills buy the clothes for my family and replaced things like computers. I never asked for a penny.

Not that I am defending Bush, but he was criticized for not moving fast enough in Katrina even though the real fault of recovery lies at the feet of our former Democratic governor, who refused to allow the Feds in initially, and the current Democratic mayor, Ray Nagin, who sort of just disappeared into an underground bunker that was called a hotel room for a week, while his own family moved to Dallas. Now, Bush is be criticized for moving too fast in the financial matter that Congress actually voted to give Paulson the power to do whatever he wanted without Congressional approval. No matter what he does, the rules change and it is still his fault.

Now, we bailout natural and manmade disasters. When will Americans come to realization that we have to say "No" to both even though it may hurt those impacted. Saying "yes" to bailouts won't change the pain. A lot of New Orleanians, who moved away Katrina, never returned. Whether they are in pain here or there, I don't know, but governmental money didn't prevent the hurricane from coming here or the pain that was suffered by us.

Governmental money to Wall St. or Detroit has not changed and will not change the fact that many Americans are still and will be in pain.

Jim in CA
I think that we both agree on this and would probably agree that this is the most absurd time, or one of them, it our live times.

What Congress and Detroit fail to understand is that whatever they do, I will not trade in my foreign made car and buy American. No matter whether it is called a bailout, a rescue, or a Christmas present, it won't make the millions of foreign cars sitting in American driveways disasppear and be, magically, replaced with newly purchased American made cars.

So, I think you would agree that it is an absurd idea however they do it.

No Bailout... But
I don't agree with the bailout either, but I think that there are things that the government can do to save the industry, without having to ditch out another 25 Billion dollars to them.
1- Let them reorganize under Chapter 11, while guaranteeing their survival.
2- Demand that countries like Japan and South Korea, etc, that benefit from our free trade agreement, yet practice protectionism on their side, cease their protectionist practice or face high tariffs on all of their products on our side. We should let them know that we are for Free Trade, as long as it cuts both ways.
3- Rescind some of the most ridiculous CAFÉ standards that put additional burden on the industry.
4- And as a last resort, have the federal Government pick up the tab in the form of a tax break to the buyer, for fifty percent of the state’s sales tax paid on all new American vehicles purchased.
This will increase sales and help the state's budgets as well.

This should be easy

After spending time reading all the reasons the auto companies have problems, as written by posters on TH, I went to the bedroom and watched TV for a few minutes and found the real reason.

One man, I don’t know who, looked like he was testifying before some kind of committee, and he gave the reason for the Auto companies problems, and I am surprised you didn’t think of this earlier.

He said, yes he actually did, “The automobiles are being built so good they don’t wear out and need to be replaced.”

And a US congressman actually said that if the Auto Companies can prove they can build a car to the specification of Congress, and make a profit doing it, they should be given the money.

That most likely means 50 mpg, no exhaust, burn 50¢ per gallon fuel, and cost $1,000. Other than that, it should be easy.


Do it their own way
MD/MG Location: IL
Reply # 51

Date: Nov 18, 2008 - 9:25 AM EST
Hey, GM just
opened a NEW plant...............in Russia.

If they can open a new plant OVERSEAS, why do we need to bail them out?

=========

That should be obvious. They profit where the Government and the Unions do not control what they must do.


Pick your own title
Federal Contractor Misconduct Database (FCMD)
94. General Motors Corp. $ 513.1m
12 Instances of Misconduct(Since 1995)
$ 313.7m Misconduct $(Since 1995)

http://contractormisconduct.org/

Vote no unless we get offshore drilling and a card check ban ,
Some of our complaints?
union costs?
ceo pay?
ceo's removed?

Seems we all want to lower everyones pay ,but how about congress pay?
I wish I had a job that paid me more than most while I was on vacation?

$50,000 from every member of congress would come to $26,000,000
or over $100,000,000 in 4 short years? Also what would that save in
pensions?


taxpayers work 4 or 5 months now for government,when will we have to work
6 months or more? heck we should move the 4rth of July to the 4th of
Augest?

Now what good is bailing GM out if we will still use other peoples oil to
make gasoline? china is drilling off our coast? will we be buying our oil
from China? Why would it matter if we get 35mpg's or 30mpg's if it is
still non-American oil?

Why should Calif. reap any money from off shore oil? Is it there's?
If any would collect from off shore oil it should be used to pay down the
debt. and not state, How do the inland states collect any money?
I THINK IF WE TAKE OUR FREIGHT OFF THE ROADS AND ON TO RAIL THE AUTO
COMPANIES COULD MAKE HIGHER MPG'S IN CARS BUT HOW CAN WE BUILD LIGHTER
CARS THAT WILL COMPETE WITH 40 ROLLING TONS ON THE SAME ROADS?

IS THAT LIKE HAVING AN AA MEETING AT THE LOCAL BAR?
COMMON SENSE WOULD BE
TO LOWER CONGRESS PAY,JUST LIKE CEO PAY,
COMMON SENSE WOULD BE
TO USE AMERICAN OIL FOR AMERICAN AUTOS WE BAIL OUT,

VOTE YES FOR DRILLING ,
VOTE YES FOR CARD CHECK BAN
VOTE YES FOR LESS TAXPAYER MONEY FOR HIGH PAY IN ALL AREAS OF GOVERNMENT


"It's the unions, stupid."

"It's the unions, stupid," to paraphrase Bill Clinton.

Until the unions acknowledge their part in crippling the auto makers and are willing to make concessions, in other words, negotiate, I say, no go on an auto bailout.

When the unions acknowledge their dues-payers are:
1. overpaid for the job that they do;
2. compensated for work they don't do;
3. receive handouts and freebies they don't deserve;

then, maybe.

There probably will be a bailout of some sort or another, however, because the liberals want to protect their voting block.


Congress is full of Retards
The Auto industry isnt failing; it is the Unionized auto industry that is failing.

Everyone BUT the Big 3 are relatively healthy. The difference; the freaking Unions. Every other Car Company has to deal with the EXACT same standars as the Big 3 and they do jsut fine.

You ever considered why the Big3 pushed trucks and SUVs for so long?? Because the profit margin on those items were the only thing that kept them alive because of Union overhead.

Unions tried to get a foothold in the other companies plants; and were thrown out on their a**. This is why they want 'card check' so badly.

In short the unions were needed at one time; but no longer. The primary function of a union was to help workers; now they do just the oposite; and hurt them.


Money flows, and is taxed

Do any of you remember this story. Henry Ford (owner of the company) and Walter Ruther (head of auto workers union) were walking through a new auto plant, with a lot of automated machines. Henry said, “Walter, I’d like to see you collect union dues from those machines. “ Walter replied, “Henry, I’d like to see you sell a car to one of those machines.” So you see, it depends on which side of the fence you are on.

There are 10s of millions of people who make there whole living, or a part of their living working on Autos, and I bet 99% of them drive a car. So if those jobs do not continue paying a living wage (not necessarily a union wage) what happens then.

Remember that money flows, it doesn’t not stop. You get paid and go to the grocery store, and they get paid and go to the shoe store, and they get paid and buy a car. And at each and every step, the Government collects income tax, sales tax, property tax, and on and on.

If someone does not spend, no one gets anything. If the Government does loan or give, or whatever, billions to GM, how soon does that money turn around often enough for the government to get it back in taxes from consumers?

A while back
a post said that if the big 3 went bankrupt, the factories will be sold to soomeone who will use the facilities to start building cars. The differences will be that there won't be a union to drive up the costs, and all the previous ratholes (job banks, lifetime healthcare, high pensions) will be gone. The new owner will pay at the rates of the foreign car makers. If this owner builds cars that Americans want, he will be a success.

Robin @ 2:41: You got to be kidding! There are even more dems now, and they are even worse than their predecessors.

REPEAL ALL THE TAXES AND REDUCE THE PRICE FOR CARS AND EVERYTHING ELSE BY ONE-THIRD (1/3).

Cat @ 10:03: No bailing out a sinking ship.
How about this:
Bailing out sinking ships shall be done only by those who sank it.

Navy-baby: It would take a week to get to Grandma's, and a week to get back.

bailout
The so called "Big 3" deserve no bailout loan until they file for bankruptcy and restructure their organizations, guaranteeing that taxpayers
will get their money back.

No to UAW
I agree with those of you suggesting restructuring under Chap 11 bankruptcy. As reported yesterday on FOX and HNN, UAW officials were asked to approve certain "concessions" as a condition for a bailout. The answer? Absolutely not!

@ Masters degree give me SOME crdibility against being totally ignorant! The way I see it is the UAW - once something good protecting workers - is proportionately guilty for the financial conditions of the Big Three.

The demanads the UAW sought have become unsustainable. BE CAREFUL WHAT YOU ASK FOR 'CAUSE YOU JUST MIGHT GET IT! The greed of the UAW has set up the golden goose to be bar-B-Qed!

An example of Union thinking

When I worked at IHC in Chicago in the late '40s, I did not join the Union in spite of threats and the forging of my name.

One time a stock boy had a heavy load in this hands that he needed to put down. The place where he was to put it, had some trash right there.

I grabbed a broom and made one swipe, and he could put down the heavy load.

Well the Union men screamed to high heaven, reported me to headquarters, and tried to get me fired because that swipe of the broom was union labor.

And I saw the same kind of thing in the Merchant Marine when the wrong person tried to clear off a table so he could eat lunch. It wasn't his job to clear the table.

But remember this, the only thing worse than a union today, is the management practices years ago that made them necessary and possible.

Just like a Government Regulation, they exist only because the managers of some business did
a lousy job, so regulation was needed. But did you notice that usually the only time a Government Regulation really causes a problem is when they are removed.

Golden Egg

Has the UAW killed the goose that laid the golden egg?

Liberal scare tactics
Obama spoke of the auto companies "colapseing" and this is totally not true as chapter 11 wouldn't be a "colapse."

IF they did chapter 11 before they went bankrupt and got new management then private sector might give them the 25 million.

Obama said he wants to bail them out with strings. That kind of logic is going to get us into more an more trouble.

This is incredible, people paid up to ninetly percent of 75 dollars and hour not to work!

I didn't know the UAW paid that much.


CAFE standards
Last time the Cafe Standards were implemented, highway deaths actually increased because the quickest way to better mileage is to lighten the vehicle.

My Volvo doesn't get fabulous/astronomical gas mileage, but I feel safer in it than these little "tin cans" I see on the roads.

Until the tractor-trailers have their own Interstate Highways, I will always drive the safest vehicle I can afford (never buy it new) and be especially prudent in my seatbelt use.

How is it that the semi rigs continually get larger--even tandem--yet the passenger cars must get smaller? BTW, do you ever see us driving an electric car to Grandma's for Thanksgiving? I don't.

Take the spanking
It's time for the auto industry illuminati to fess up to the bad judgment, misdeeds and UAW manipulation and just get it over with. A well-deserved spanking (a shakeout) could do wonders for their future growth. Spare not that rod!

BAILOUTS LEAD TO DEMOCRAT GOAL ...

.....NATIONALIZATION OF THE AUTO-INDUSTRY ...

.....Lenin was one of the first to see that unions could be used as social tools to take control of industry and pave the way for Government socialism ...this is not a Big Three bailout ...it is a bailout of the UAW ...

.....Below is an exerpt from an article on my Blog titled "UNIONS PART SEVEN" ...click on my name to read the entire article ...

....."What the United Automobile Workers has done ...on the foundation of coercive interventionist labor legislation ...is bring a once great company to its knees. It has done this by a process of forcing one obligation after another upon the company ...while at the same time ...through its work rules ...featherbedding practices ...hostility to labor saving devices ...and outlandish pay scales ...doing everything in its power to make it impossible for the company to meet those obligations" .....COLOSSUS

UNIONS ARE HOLDING AMERICA HOSTAGE
When unions were originally organized it was for the benefit of the workers who worked in sweat shops in dangerous situations. They served their purpose to help workers with better working conditions and pay. Now they have too much power and influence in government.
Look at the past history of AFL-CIO and the deceased thug, Hoffa and other union bosses. Unions were also supporters of the infamous community organizer ACORN. This thread leads right back to the Socialist Democrats and Obama who supports the unions.

80% of America workers are employed by small business. Who will bail them out if needed? Obama wants to tax them more. See the pattern?

Park
Yes. And Toyota is no more Japanese than GM is American--they are both multinational corporations. Chrysler will have its new economy car made by Chery Automobile Corporation in China (Qirui Qiche Gongsi). If you work for Chrysler does that mean you work for Beijing? Most Toyotas that are sold in the US are built in the US and I don't see any problems with Americans building cars for Toyota in Kentucky. It makes no difference if it is an American wearing a GM uniform in Michigan or one wearing a Toyota one in Kentucky.

The doomsday scenerio is pure tripe. Perhaps there is no need for three major US automakers (just as Japan has found out that five major automakers there is probably too many). There will probably be some consolidation and yes there may be some non-US based multinational stake in the surviors (like Ford's stake in Mazda). 60 years ago there were many more car makers than there are now. Hudson, Nash, Studebaker, Packard are all gone. The world didn't come to and end when the US went from six or seven majors to three nor will it if the US went from three to two or to one or to zero.

No bailout. Let them die or continue on their own. GM is losing 1 billion a month, how will giving 50 billion do anything but delay the inevitable and lose even more cash for the American taxpayer?




Hey, GM just
opened a NEW plant...............in Russia.

If they can open a new plant OVERSEAS, why do we need to bail them out?

Auto bailout
This is NOT the time to allow the auto industry to go completely bankrupt. They want something a little less than 50 billion to continue retooling, etc.
Now, the lenders, banks and financial institutions, that are being bailed out are giving 50 billion dollars of the bailout money to employees as bonuses!! Do you believe any of them DESERVE a bonus?? That money could well be used to loan to people who need it. OR give it to the auto industry.
If the auto industry goes under there are probably 300-400,000 jobs that would be lost. In this financial climate that would just about be the end of the government. They can't handle all of it.
But, hey, who cares about those union workers and especially the executives???

The Big Three and Truck/SUV Sales
I believe that the Big Three emphasized light truck and SUV production because both vehicle types were classifed as "trucks" and were exempt from some/all CAFE/fuel mileage restrictions. Another example of government helping industry and deforming the market.

'steigerwald
This bailout is not about the auto industry; it's about the two and a half million people who will be deeply affected if hey go down, and the bill our children will have ay in order to keep them alive.

The unions are not going to be enough to stop this ship from sinking, which is what it will do.

Personally, I'm thinking that a possible scenario would be, once the big three have been thrown under the bus by americn taxpayers, that it might be sold to the Japanese, for example - the factories and personnel are there already, let the mechanics and factory men work for Beijing or Japan!

Credit Cards Do Not Make More Money
Credit Cards Not Make More Money
Big Unions carry a lot of the responsibility for the auto industry woes. If productive needed work or services are not being produced or if we exploit our resources without thought of conservation and renewal a financial melt down will happen.

Our pioneer families carved this nation out of small beginnings, and a heart felt vision for tomorrow. However as conditions improved and means were discovered and used we began to out produce our needs, so luxuries, idleness and pleasures without accountability multiplied and the entitlement attitude became the norm, the youth begin to take things for granted.

We are on the verge of losing everything by more mismanagement and selfish elitist attitudes, which undermine the selfless spirit of service, that is cultivated in the spirit of gratitude, the mother of all virtues. If we do not appreciate what we have right now, more will not make us happy. This applies to lifestyles, never satisfied and ever wanting more at the expense of others; they would destroy just to see if that would make them happy. With that attitude, a lasting joy is never achieved.

Our pioneer families provided their only health care using herbals, as doctors were rare. They had no retirement plan, or child care, no need for abortion, and abstinence was their means of family planning.

Our biggest problem is that not only government is the problem, so are a great number of people who expect service as an entitlement. What the nation needs is for every able bodied person to produce all they can for themselves, to share the excess for those who through no fault of there own are unable to; to help them if possible to do what they can.

The love of God created this great country. Grant you some persecuted others in self interest, and which goes on today. An economic stimulus will not amount to a hill of beans if we do not change our ways. “Wickedness never was happiness,” and it never will be.

Manufacturers & Unions Have Provision
The contracts that BOTH the manufacturers and unions signed all have a provision that, if both parties agree, their contract can be negotiated. The fact is they do not want to negotiate. They want what they've agreed-to, and they want US to pay for it.

If the government says "NO" they'll be forced to go negotiate and get reasonable. When unions first started, we didn't have OSHA or workmans' comp, (child) age laws, minimum wage, etc. We have all these sanctions now; unions aren't needed. All unions do now is collect money from members and support Democrats by making campaign contributions and endorsing Democrats. Good riddance.

All Industries Getting In Bail-Out Line
AIG got "theirs" and Fannie & Freddie (and co-conspirators in Congress, including Dodd and Obama) got "theirs." California has already asked for "theirs," and now all the Big 3 automakers have asked for "theirs." Some have already stated they will need more.

I predict lots of other industries are moving to get in line for "theirs." Congress is doling out the American pie to their cronies and are determined to leave nothing but a pie plate of crumbs.

I also predict Sarah Palin will be around to help re-build the pie in 2012. I bet she makes really good pies.

Obama sells out...

To the "Special Interests"...

This clown is heading straight for the bankroll of the Detroit Lobbyists he so ardently Lobbied against during his campaign.

What a lying sell-out dirtball!

What else to expect from a 'very typical' career politician.

And you Liberals 'thought' he was an 'Outsider'. Ha!

Obama is total D.C. trash !!

The bail out will occur
Not because it is deserved,
Not because it will do any substantive, and
Not because it necessary.

It'll be done because the Democrats are beholden to the UAW and other Unions.

Let them file for bankruptcy, reorganize and get their act together.

Note to Texas Senators and Representatives... JUST SAY NO...

Well Said
Totally inept management.
In 3-4 months they will need another bailout.
Even if they revamp and try to build more, or for that matter an, economical car, what is their history at that? JUNK? Can you say Vega, Pinto, Corvair, Chevette (Shoveit), Falcon, Nova (appropriately named), Dart, Fiesta, and on and on. All junk! So now they're screwed. Nobody wants a gas guzzler and no body believes they can build a semi decent economical car based on their 100% failure at it.
Let em die sooner than later.

Cat
Should my locally owned community banks and credit unions sue the government for the same reason?
Should the states that do not need a bailout sue for the same reason if CA or NY get bailouts?
It is not that I disagree with the premise you put forth.
The whole show is going to deteriorate into a morass.
We can see it.

I just figured it out
I mean where the $75/hr compensation numbers come from. It is shop rate. It is not actual compensation plus benefits.
I make $34/hr. General Motors has ALWAYS said my benefit package is worth around (they use the term "around" in the documents) 1/3 of the cash compensation amount. So 1/3 of $34 is $11.33; added to $34 and you get $45.33. About .33 more than I read somewhere else on TH than an American Toyota employee makes. The difference there can be accounted for in my case because I am in the highest pay grade in my shop. Everyone else makes less which would make some of us here at GM compensated less than at Toyota.
All that doesn't cover the compensation reductions negotiated in the 2007 contract.
You people are getting told what the shop rate is. In fact the shop rate for me is around $105/hr. It isn't what I get.
You are being B.S.'d.

Toyota, Honda and successful companies
should sue the government for interference in free markets. Then they should take all their American based companies and move them overseas to punish our government for taking away their competitive edge. You want to talk free fall markets, I hope that all these successful companies leave our country for a fair chance in a fair market. Since our government gets to decide who succeeds and who doesn't, fine, leave it.
Democrats are such crooks, it didn't take them long before they had their hands out. They won't be happy until America is ruined.
Let these crappy old fat cat companies go down. The market will survive and thrive once these deadbeat companies get out of the way of innovative successful competition.
NO BAILING OUT A SINKING SHIP!

WAY Down South
What is the difference? Socialism for the rich vs. socialism for the working class? Socialism for the financial sector vs. socialism for the manufacturing sector?
Down at the root, it's all socialism.
You either believe that free markets and capitalism are capable tools in a system or you don't.
The leadership of the nation, both Dems and Repubs obviously don't.
The only real identifiable difference is that some people have more pull.
Remember All the theoretical spew about the collapse of the whole system if we didn't do the financial bailout? That is pure gobbledygook put out the the very same con artist that had told all of us right up to mid-summer that the financial system was sound.
Most people here on TH said as much.

Congress should look out for working guy

Congress should look out for the working guy. Let GM, Ford, Chyrsler go into Chapter 11, reorganize, then come out a stronger and more competative company whose workers are secure in their future.

The consumer will benefit by having better quality cars that they actually want to buy, with better warrenties, better fuel economy, better enviormental protection, less foreign oil imports and increased national security.

No wonder Democrats support bailout.

Big Three a Bad Investment
Rather than asking "should we bail out the big three", ask instead "should I be forced to invest in a failing corporation against my will". A bailout will just delay the inevitable.

Akagi
Sorry about that. I enjoy your posts and I was off base.

Taft
Yes I know. Re-read my posts. I clearly stated the Toyota cars and trucks were made in places like Kentucky and Indiana. It is not WHERE they are made or by whom, but under what conditions.


para_dimz
“What is the moral difference between bailing out the mortgage industry and the auto industry?”

Ask Congressperson Thaddeus McCotter of Michigan.

He supports an automaker bailout but opposed a Wall Street bailout, so there must be a difference.

I’m sure he can answer your question.

Akagi 2
Toyota is not seeking a bailout. I have been careful to avoid saying that I am for a bailout. Even though it is my bacon on the line here and even though the bank bailouts changed the bar for moral hazard, bailouts rub me the wrong way.

So the effect I am really trying to have in this debate thread is to put up some defense of the people who work for GM. A little bit.

Honest guy that I am I will admit that the workrules and work ethic would choke a Japanese fire breathing dragon, for sure.

Akagi
We compare favorably with Toyota in compensation and productivity. I will acknowledge that they have an edge. I stress the word edge.

Akagi

Japan is a deep recession too, and their Corolas are made by engineers produced/educated by the USA.

Para
Ever heard of these models? The Tundra, the Land Cruiser, the Sequoia, the Highlander? Is Toyota seeking a bailout?


****4
What is the moral difference between bailing out the mortgage industry and the auto industry? Both of them are in trouble due, in part to an implosion of credit that they both have to have to survive.
Is there some moral equivalency I cannot fathom that makes a bailout of a troubled homeowner with a mortgage a better thing to do?

Bottoms up!!
No bailouts for the carmakers, and here is why;

1. Bad management and a failure to change as the market for their products has changed has been the ruin of them.

2. Unions are a ball and chain around the neck of the big 3. As long as the big 3 have unions weighing them down they will continue to flounder.

3. They have already recieved 25 billion and that wasn't enough. Will they be back in 2 months wanting us, the taxpayers, to pay for their mismanagement all over again?

I think they need to do a pre-cooked bankruptcy. It keep the majority of the workers working, it would allow them to reorganize, get rid of some of the baggage they are currently carrying, and become profitable. It worked for the airlines so why wouldn't it work for the carmakers?

The way i see it, they can go the bankruptcy route and keep most of Detroit working, or they can all be out of work in 3 to 6 months.

Para
"We at GM don't make near $75/hr even with benefits counted in."

How much do you make compared to a line worker at the Toyota Kentucky. You might not make $75 an hour, but I bet you make more than the Kentucky workers. How much is your health insurance cost GM? How much does it cost Toyota--North America? How productive are GM workers with the UAW rules compared to the Toyota shop?

****3
GM didn't make big trucks and SUV's because THEY were stupid. They built them because YOU bought them.

****2
The jobs bank pays the unemployed to sit around or do non-traditional tasks (whatever that means) and sometimes community service. In any event it is a private enterprise solution to unemployment. That is something I should think you all would applaud. It keeps us off the public dole.

Thomas
Toyota seems to be doing pretty well producing cars in the US and US buyers buying them.

And once GM and the rest of the bloated, Chinese-steel mill like companies in Michigan implodes, it will have about the same electors as Mississippi. The GOP doesn't need Michigan--it does need Nevada, and New Mexico, NC and VA though and a GM bailout won't sit well in those parts. As for the Midwest, Toyota has plants there--Indiana.

GM closed its plant in Georgia, Kia opened up a plant in Georgia. Who do you think we should support GM or Kia?

Let GM sink!


Bailout?
Our Big Three have been circling the drain for years and anything short of court ordered reorganization will only prolong the inevitable.
The only thing the government should do is scrap nonsensical (and union supported!) CAFE standards and get franchise laws rewritten so the domestics could start to get rid of its redundant dealer network.

If a $50bn loan/bailout goes through we're looking at a situation where taxpayers could be scaffing up more than the market capitalization of all three combined!

Unfortunately for the UAW, they've priced themselves out of the market and that's not the fault of the taxpayers.

***
We at GM don't make near $75/hr even with benefits counted in.

We better!
First off, Steigerwald is an embarrassment because Daimler-Chrysler isn't even a company anymore. Someone should tell him.

"then you're explicitly penalizing companies like Honda, Toyota and Nissan because they've made the better decisions."

Honda, Toyota, and Nissan get the hook up from their own home counties by way of subsidies and protectionism!

If the GOP doesn't support loans to the big 3 they can write off winning elections in the Midwest for the next 50 years. Do you really want to be the just party of Utah, the south, and the country clubs?

GM
Another doomsday scenerio. Who's next in line?

WIll GM fail, probably not, but it will be reorganized and that is why there is a process for bankrupt firms.

Even if it failed completely, so? The required demand would be taken up by other firms like Toyota, Kia and the like. And the out of work autoworkers could always find employment there. Seems Toyota can make a profit building cars in the US, if GM had Toyota work rules, maybe it could too.

It would help if GM and other so-called American companies had TQM in place too. I had a Neon, lost two transmissions with 40,000 miles, a radiator, the head gasket. A Dodge Ram 1500--power stearing, water pump twice, a speed sensor in the transmission, and a number of other things. I am through with Ameircan automakers, let them fold for all I care. I'll never be buying another one.

No Way!
No goddam union bailout! File chap.11 reorganize, and build a product we'll buy, and can afford, morons!

Bailout

Would it be the smartest move in the world, to now in our recession, and high unemployment rate, to toss into the mix an extra million more unemployed? Bill and many of the elitist neocons could care less about the little guy, I know, but the average Christian would.

Buy GM Stock!
Of course Detroit will be bailed out. The politics of fear of impending national disaster will surely win the day just as when King-Pin Paulson pushed through his own personal banking slush fund.

Who will stop an automaker bailout? Those that support it are very powerful and there are few foes.

Until last night, I had been somewhat impressed by Michigan’s 11nth District Congressperson, Thaddeus McCotter. He was 100% against the Wall Street-Bank bailout.

Now that his own district is in trouble, he is supporting a bailout of GM. McCotter’s basic point seems to be that Detroit’s problems were caused by Washington and Wall Street. He blamed GM’s woes on CAFÉ standards and the bailout’s failure to open the credit markets. Of course McCotter doesn’t call it a bailout. He calls it a bridge loan.

Congressperson McCotter lays no blame at the feet of the Socialist thugs at the UAW or the unbelievably incompetent GM management.

He stated,

“What happens if the manufacturing domestic auto industry goes under? What happens if the supply chain goes under? You’re not just talking about an economic transformation of the United States where we don’t produce, we simply consume and become Western European, you’re also talking about the dismantling and the demise of the arsenal of Democracy.”

He even stated that if Republican’s didn’t support a ‘bailout/bridge loan/whatever the hell you want to call it,’ that Michigan’s Republican House members would be thrown out and the state would turn entirely blue, just like New England.

This is the type of fear mongering that McCotter railed against when Paulson employed it two months ago.

When it comes to parochial interests, it seems that no-one is ever principled.

Everyone is a hypocrite.

http://johnbatchelorshow.com/podcasts/2008/11/november-16-2 008/

H-m-m-m
Ever see spoiled, obnoxious children. You know that ones whose parents cannot say "No." to them? Ever see well-adjusted, respectful children who know their limits because their parents have set the boundaries for them? Does anyone see any parallels here?

It's a No-Brainer
What Congress, the Senate, and the President are arguing about is whether or not 10 million more Americans will lose their jobs and whether or not this country will maintain any manufacturing capability at all. If we lose 10 million jobs the loss of commerce will cost us 10 million more jobs and affect foreign companies and the ability of people to eat in 3rd world countries.

The unemployment costs to the taxpayers, should they fail to provide our automakers loans, will exceed $200 billion per year. Aside from all of the other issues that these armchair automakers are trying to cloud the issue with, it definitely is a no-brainer so, even these people should not be having this much trouble making a decision.

http://ewebsmith.com/gov/autobailout.html

CUT ALL THE CAR PRICES IN HALF!
SELL EVERY THING ON THE LOTS ALL OVER AMERICA!THEN START ALL OVER!

This is a Union Bailout
And I say NO! Unfortunately, individual people on pensions will pay, but the rest of us can't be held responsible for this. Our taxes are not supposed to be used to bail out companies and unions who make bad business decisions.

It is National Security ..Stupid
Who do you think builds your tanks and HVs for the wars we are fighting? the Japanese? Or maybe the Russians? I can't figure out why anyone would argue this bailout. It is awful to have to bailout the thieves at the auto industry but it National Security ....Stupid. Start thinking like a real conservative and not like some dumb Alabama congressman trying to even the score.

My husband
spent over 35 years supplying the paper industry and one of his biggest gripes was when he was servicing a machine, if something as innocuous as a light bulb going out, he had to stand around til some union light bulb changer could be found to change it. His time was money charged to the mill but perish the thought somebody with a ladder and not the designated bulb changer could do that simple thing.
I Hate unions, I saw what a union did to my hometown. They unionized, got a strike and the
mill packed up, moved south to a friendlier
state. And it left broken friendships and families and decades of bitter feelings behind..
and the union left with nothing but the trouble it caused. I watched the devastation they caused within my own family and half moved south with the mill, it separated an immigrant family so yeah, I have reason to hate Unions.

Unions are pushing for the bailout
because they realize that the hand that is feeding them has been bitten off.

$75 an hour. Paying workers for not working. It seems the best thing we can do to help these guys along with their reality check is to buy a Toyota.

Don't Bail Out the
Sooner or later thew will bail them out. They will have no choice if the wish to prevent a great depression. The bailout will need conditions to prevent a repeat bad preforance.

Usering in a great depression to punish people who will exercise there golden parachutes to escape any punishment akes little sense. Its akin to killing a patient to curue his illness.

THE MARKET KNOWS HOW TO CORRECT
EVERYTIME THE CONGRESS DOES NOTHING THE MARKET CORRECT ITSELF. NO BAILOUT NEEDED WACHOVIA AND WELLS FARGO, JUST AS BUFFET STEPPED UP WITH HIS
PURCHASING POWER. BANKS CAN FAIL AND THE ECONMY WILL BECOME STRONGER, JUST AS THE AUTO INDUSTRY
COULD GO BANKRUPT, A WHILE AGO CHRYSLER SURVIVED
IT AND CAME OUT STRONG ENOUGH TO PURCHASE OTHER
AUTO-MAKERS. HOW SOON WE FORGET THE SAVINGS AND
LOAN CRISIS OF THE 80'S YET THE COUNTRY SURVIVED THAT TO AS WELL AS THE GAS PRICE HIKE
THAT CEASED AS SOON AS PRESIDENT BUSH OPEN DIALOG ABOUT DRILLING IN AMERICA.

If, then what?--
If the so called big 3 are bailed out then who is next and next, ad infinitum. The country is broke and soon as every one knows the dollar will be almost worthless.
The buffoons in charge of these bailouts will only do what their puppet masters tell them, IMO.

Best Thing
Congress did the best thing they could for the high gas prices. They did nothing! And the gas prices went down. Way to go, Congress! You've finally proven that you can do the right thing at the right time! Nothing but the best for the people of America! And that is what Congress delivers: nothing!

Overturn Dodge v. Ford
a lot of these problems could be solved if US cooperations were not limited in there charters by Dodge v. Ford

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dodge_v._Ford_Motor_Company

Good points made here...
I hope the government will listen to people who have some smarts in this area. I didn't want the government to pass the big bailout bill and contacted my representative and senators in that regard. I really don't want the government to be in the business of bailing out private companies and I am against an auto bailout. I have, once again, written to my representative and senators opposing such a plan. I don't know if it does any good, but at least I know I spoke up. My senators are both in-the-tank dems so they, I'm sure, are very much in favor of bailouts. My representative voted against the big bailout and held his ground. He earned my vote on 11/04, and he won handily. I will be working against the two senators who ignore the people they represent.

Let them go under
We have bankruptcy courts for a reason in this country. Let them file for chapter 11 and be done with it. Delta and United airlines did the very same thing and they are still out their.


Taxpayers are not responsible for the mess that the big 3 are in, they are. It is not the responsiility of the taxpayers to help them out. They thought nothing of over-pricing their vehicles, making them un-buyable to the average American consumer. So we went elsewhere. The big 3 are never going to change, and I agree, if they are bailed out, they will be back for more in a couple of months.

Also, I don't seem to remember Nancy and Harry doing anything for the American consumer when gas prices rose to over $4.00 a gallon. Those two charlatans refused to "bailout" the American people, so now, we are refusing to bailout the big 3.

Bye Bye, GM, Ford and Chrysler. Good riddance to you all.
Sign Up to Post Your CommentsSign Up to Post Your Comments
If you are already registered, click here to login. Otherwise, please take a few seconds to register with Townhall.com. Once you sign up, you’ll be able to post your comments immediately, use the action center, get podcasts, and more!
Note: Fields marked with a red asterisk (*) are required.
Salutation:
First Name:
*
Last Name:
*
Email:
*
Nickname:
*
Note: Nick name will be shown when you post comments.
Address 1:
*
Address 2:
City:
*
State:
*
Zip:
*
Phone:
      
Your daily must-read of conservative columns, cartoons and news. Coulter, Sowell, Krauthammer and more.
(Bi-Weekly) We highlight the best opportunities from our partners for surveys, action items and more.