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Smith Faculty
Opinion Article |
July 7, 2006 |
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By Dr. Peter Morici, Professor of
International Business
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The Tragedy that is
General Motors
The GM Board of Directors should
listen to its managers and nix the
alliance with Renault and Nissan
proposed by shareholder Kirk Kerkorian.
The tie-up promises to cut costs by
pooling parts procurement and elements
of vehicle design. These benefits are
fantasy, and only thinly veil an attempt
by Kerkorian to shake up GMs inept
management and Board of Directors.
GMs has two essential problems.
First, GM pays about $40 an hour more
for labor than the North American arms
of Toyota and Honda, and that margin
well exceeds GMs unfunded obligations to
retired workers. Second, GM has a
legendarily bureaucracy that drives up
product design, marketing and
administrative costs.
To compensate, GM uses cheaper
materials and specs down components.
Consequently, GM vehicles are less
attractive and their five-year
reliability records lag those sold by
Toyota and Honda. Check out the cheesy
interiors of many recent Chevy
offerings, and the reliability data
published in Consumer Reports. Only a
fool would pay as much for a GM product
as a Toyota or Honda.
Also to compensate for high costs and
management missteps, GM leaves vehicles
on the self longer than Japanese rivals,
and often equips vehicles with older,
less attractive technology. To further
save cash, GM rebadges vehicles to sell
under more than one nameplate. For
example, offering Chevys and Subaru's as
Saabs has debased that once strong
brand.
Pooling parts purchases with Nissan
and Renault wont get GM lower prices.
Already GM, the biggest automaker on the
planet, has hammered many of its
suppliers into bankruptcy.
GM doesn't need more leverage to buy
shoddy water pumps. It needs to pay less
for labor so it can afford to purchase
decent parts. Honda, which is much
smaller than either GM or Toyota, has no
problem buying quality parts at good
prices. If Rick Wagoner or Kirk
Kerkorian don't believe that, they should
go down to CarMax and drive a 2001 Honda
Accord.
Pooling vehicle design efforts with
Renault and Nissan wont help. Both
companies face much the same problems as
GM. Renault has failed in past attempts
to sell cars in North America, because
it could not put attractive, durable
products in the showroom. High labor
costs are compelling the company to make
and sell fewer cars in Europe, as
Japanese nameplates take away customers.
Lacking fresh offerings, Nissans
North American sales are off 5.7 percent
the first half of this year. Meanwhile,
Toyota and Honda sales are soaring.
Pooling design efforts with Renault
and Nissan will only add to GM costly
bureaucracy and result in more futile
rebadging. If Nissan cant sell as many
Altimas as Toyota does Camrys because
the Altima does not perform as well, it
wont accomplish much marketing the
Altima under the Chevy and Pontiac
nameplates too.
If size would solve the GM makes dull
cars problem, Mr. Kerkorian has an
obligation to explain to shareholders
why GM cant make cars as reliable and
attractive as little Honda.
The real problem at GM is that CEO
Rick Wagoner lacks the stomach to
negotiate a realistic contract with the
United Autoworkers and the management
skills to clean up GMs bureaucracy, or
his Board wont let him. Either way, the
problem is not the size of the company.
Enter Kirk Kerkorian with a plan to
put Renault and Nissan CEO Carlos Ghosn
in charge of a three way alliance.
Mr. Ghosn is a talented executive,
credited with turning around Nissan by
severing many of its equity
relationships with suppliers and
dealers, and streamlining parts
procurement. At GM, what can be done
along those lines is either already
accomplished or underway. Mr. Ghosn has
no new magic to provide.
GM already has one great car guy.
Vice Chairman for Product Development
and Chairman for North American
operations Robert Lutz deserves as much
credit for rescuing Chrysler from
bankruptcy as does Lee Iacocca. Yet, he
cant overcome GMs culture of
complacency.
Currently, Mr. Ghosn faces
intensifying competition in Europe, and
is encumbered by militant French unions
and a 15 percent French government stake
in Renault. These provide the same
burdens to agility as the United
Autoworkers and a Paleolithic Board of
Directors do for GM. Mr. Ghosn should
show us how he is going to resolve those
issues at home before offering himself
as savior to GM.
In the end, GMs problem is a crisis
of governance. GM wont change until the
Board is radically changed. How often
does a Board of Directors, not found
guilty of criminal actions, fire itself?
That is the tragedy that is General
Motors.
Peter Morici
is an economist and professor at the Robert
H. Smith School of Business at the
University of Maryland. He is a recognized
expert on international economics,
industrial policy and macroeconomics. Prior
to joining the university, he served as
director of the Office of Economics at the
U.S. International Trade Commission.
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