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The Prodigal Automakers

The Prodigal Automakers

Chuck Colson

BreakPoint


November 20, 2008

Imagine if the parable of the Prodigal Son went something like this: After wasting his inheritance, the son returns to the father. But instead of repenting and asking the father to take him back as a slave, the son says, “Dad, I’ve made a mess of things. Could you spot me some cash so I can get out of this hole?”

Well, essentially, that’s what the Big Three automakers and the United Auto Workers are doing this week on Capitol Hill.

At a Senate Banking Committee hearing, the CEOs renewed their case for a “$25 billion lifeline.” GM chief Rick Wagoner told senators that the industry “needs a bridge to span the financial chasm that has opened up before us.”

The reception was chilly, to say the least. And rightly so. Committee chairman Christopher Dodd told the executives they were “seeking treatment for wounds that were largely self-inflicted.” And, mind you, Dodd supports assistance for the automakers!

When Wagoner insisted that the “global financial crisis” is behind the automakers’ imminent collapse, Senator Mike Enzi of Wyoming replied that the Big Three’s problems run a lot deeper. He cited “inefficient production” and “costly labor agreements” as the reason for Detroit’s troubles.

Enzi is right. As former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney pointed out in the New York Times yesterday, “G.M. currently employs about 8,000 people who actually don’t come to work.” And those who do come to work are paid, on average, “$10 to $20 an hour more than people who do the same job building cars” in the neighboring states “for foreign [automakers] like Toyota.”

Other costly inefficiencies cited by Romney include too many brands—GM has eight—and the too many dealerships. GM, whose market share is the about the same as Toyota’s, has five times as many dealerships.

The “lifeline” Wagoner and company seek would do nothing about any of this—it would just delay the inevitable reckoning that must one day take place.

That reckoning, as Romney says, is reorganization under the bankruptcy laws—along with federal guarantees for post-bankruptcy financing and auto warranties. Only then can GM and the others get rid of agreements with the UAW that keep it from being competitive. It’s the only way it can “close plants, rid itself of unprofitable brands and shed dealerships,” and save the billions it needs to compete.

In other words, like the airlines had to do, they can make through bankruptcy the necessary changes to survive.

But if we bailed out Wall Street, you ask, why not Detroit? Simply put, credit markets were frozen, and we had to prevent a global financial collapse. With the automakers, the goal of the bailout is to perpetuate arrangements that, whatever sense they made when GM had 50 percent of the market share, make absolutely no sense today when it has 20.

No bailing out those who act irresponsibly. What economist Prabhu Guptara calls the “unbiblical culture of debt” has convinced many of us that we can borrow and spend our way out of almost anything. But that, you see, is why we’re in this mess—from subprime mortgages to banking to the plight of the automakers.

So what’s good for America is also good for General Motors—some fiscal discipline.


Chuck Colson’s daily BreakPoint commentary airs each weekday on more than one thousand outlets with an estimated listening audience of one million people. BreakPoint provides a Christian perspective on today’s news and trends via radio, interactive media, and print.

BreakPoint WorldView magazine is now available for FREE online.
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Most Recent User Comments
tammycarole
11/25/2008 7:04 AM
IIn response to any other than the Big 3 being non-N American automakers, this is simply not true. I have worked for one of those 'foreign" automakers- for the last 15 years. Not only am I not "underpaid" I have excellent benefits. My employer has created the economy in our area, when all the textile mills and furniture mfg's went to Mexico & China thanks to NAFTA & CAFTA. This area was listed on yesterdays national news as one of the 5 best economy's in the US. What is different from us and the big 3- we don't have nor want a union, our CEO's don’t make $25mil a year,& there is fiscal responsibility. It is time corporate America, & Uncle Sam started leading by example and yes this includes celebrities- operate within your means- if you don't have the money- don't buy it and to the government; all you are doing is enabling bad behavior and postponing the inevitable. But I guess if you hold business leaders accountable- you might have to hold yourself accountable.
hemidart
11/24/2008 10:42 PM
I agree partly about the 3 domestic automakers.
The workers are overpaid in some "eyes"--say at
$25 & up for specialty workers. BUT--at the top
CEO level--I heard $25 million per year--plus
private jet for GM CEO--& similar for Ford--these
are the grossly overpaid cash drainers!!! NO ONE
on the face of the earth is worth this kind of
money!!! However--in my opinion--there are many
more grossly overpaid people in other areas of
life --sadly Christians support --such as going to
"Rock concerts"(Music Stars),"Movies"(Hollywood
stars)"Entertainment industry people" & "Sport
figures"--all ridiculously overpaid!!
Also--look in your driveway. If you've got a car
other than the big "three"--then you've created
part of the problem(my opinion). Every car pur-
chased other than in N. America, funnels thousands
of dollars to other countries that GROSSLY under
pay(in most cases) their workers.
Sincerely, Dan
P50116
11/24/2008 8:15 PM
The unfortunate truth is that we'll be bailing out the auto industry one way or another.

We can ensure that there are still American automakers.

Or we can pay out unemployment and later welfare to all the former automakers and their suppliers.
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