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Smith Faculty Opinion Article
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By Dr. Peter Morici, Professor of International Business
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Bush Auto Plan Will Test Obama's Union Loyalties
President Bush has agreed to lend GM and Chrysler $17.4 billion on
the condition these firms complete a plan to accomplish financial
viability.
The agreements set goals for automakers: converting two-thirds of their debt
into equity; paying company stock to fund one half of the Voluntary Employee
Benefits Associations, which fund retiree health care benefits and remove these
costs from future liabilities; aligning wages, benefits and work rules with U.S.
Nissan, Toyota or Honda operations.
These goals are generally consistent with the conditions I outlined as
necessary for the Detroit Three to achieve viability when I testified before the
Senate Banking Committee on November 18. For example, laid off workers could no
longer sit in the Jobs Banks collecting 90 percent of pay and benefits
indefinitely and engaging in productive activities like pinochle.
Financial viability requires projecting a positive net present value, taking
into account all current and future costs. It does not require a positive cash
flow by March 31. In fact, wage and benefit cuts only need be accomplished by
December 31, 2009.
Given the depressed auto market, a positive cash flow cannot be accomplished
soon, and GM and Chrysler will be asking for more federal loans when they table
their plans by March 31. If the auto market stays depressed into 2010, Ford will
likely seek assistance. Given the likely duration of the recession, loans of
well over $100 billion will be needed. Much of those could prove gifts, with the
loans never truly repaid.
Unless the automakers significantly reduce their debt, jettison retiree
legacy liabilities, and align wages, benefits, work rules with those of Japanese
transplants, they simply cannot hope to be consistently profitable.
Yet, the agreement permits the automakers to vary from those conditions if
they can still demonstrate a net positive present value. Enter the accounting
magicians
UAW contracts are exceedingly complex. GM and UAW leaders have mastered
obfuscating the consequences of their pay structure and work rules. Calculations
of net present value will importantly hinge on forecasts of future car sales and
wages paid by Toyota, Nissan and Honda. A few quick pen strokes and a lousy
business plan can be made a winner, with costs to taxpayers in unpaid loans only
becoming apparent years later.
Barack Obama owes organized labor a huge debt for his November victory. UAW
President Ron Gettelfinger can be expected to try to sell Obama labor agreements
that appear to create more concessions than are real and leave the Detroit Three
in the red going forward.
Fooling Obama would create loans the Detroit Three never can really repay.
The government could force payment at the expense of the next creditors in
line—the large U.S. banks—but the federal government is already subsidizing
their losses.
One way or the other ordinary citizens who don’t earn nearly the pay and
benefits autoworkers receive would be paying taxes to subsidize their rather
generous lifestyles, much as taxpayers are financing the bloated bonuses at
large New York banks requiring federal dole to stay afloat.
President Bush has punted the auto mess to his successor, and one of three
outcomes is possible.
President Obama can require the automakers and UAW to come up with a contract
ordinary mortals can understand, eliminate all the foolish job classifications
and work rules, and establish pay rates that make the Detroit Three competitive.
Obama can push the automakers into a prepackaged Chapter 11, perhaps by
providing some financing to ensure suppliers are paid and companies can continue
to operate, and let a bankruptcy judge impose the essential conditions of the
Bush agreement.
He can let the Detroit Three continue their profligate behavior, providing
subsidies masquerading as loans.
Obama faces the same kind of tough choice Bush did when he lavished generous
subsidies on agriculture at the beginning of his presidency. If Obama caves to
union pressures and chooses to subsidize the automakers, other unionized
industries will line up. Market discipline will not apply to the eight percent
of private workforce represented by unions, and damn the majority that really
elected him.
Peter Morici is a professor at the University
of Maryland School of Business and former Chief Economist at the U.S. International
Trade Commission.
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