Tag: General Motors
Let GM Go Bankrupt
Michael Levine lays out the case for letting General Motors enter into bankruptcy rather than get started down the path of bailing out every ailing industry. Levine outlines some of the bizarre costs that GM and other automakers are saddled with including state laws that force automakers to support a ridiculous number of car dealers,
Consider the costs of tackling GM’s problems with some kind of bailout plan. After 42 years of eroding U.S. market share (from 53% to 20%) and countless announcements of “change,” GM still has eight U.S. brands (Cadillac, Saab, Buick, Pontiac, GMC, Saturn, Chevrolet and Hummer). As for its more successful competitors, Toyota (19% market share) has three, and Honda (11%) has two.
GM has about 7,000 dealers. Toyota has fewer than 1,500. Honda has about 1,000. These fewer and larger dealers are better able to advertise, stock and service the cars they sell. GM knows it needs fewer brands and dealers, but the dealers are protected from termination by state laws. This makes eliminating them and the brands they sell very expensive. It would cost GM billions of dollars and many years to reduce the number of dealers it has to a number near Toyota’s.
. . .
And therein lies the problem: The cost of terminating dealers is only a fraction of what it would cost to rebuild GM to become a company sized and marketed appropriately for its market share. Contracts would have to be bought out. The company would have to shed many of its fixed obligations. Some obligations will be impossible to cut by voluntary agreement. GM will run out of cash and out of time.
GM’s solution is to ask the federal government for the cash that will allow it to do all of this piece by piece. But much of the cash will be thrown at unproductive commitments. And the sense of urgency that would enable GM to make choices painful to its management, its workers, its retirees, its suppliers and its localities will simply not be there if federal money is available. Like AIG, it will be back for more, and at the same time it will be telling us that it’s doing a great job under difficult circumstances.
The bailout of banks was bad enough (and completely clueless as Henry Paulson’s continual deer-in-the-headlights routine keeps revealing), but bailing out GM makes even less sense. Let GM face the music; let it enter into bankruptcy.
GM Prevails in Derrick Thomas Lawsuit
Four years ago I wrote about my incredulity and Derrick Thomas’ family suing General Motors. Thomas was an NFL player who died when he rolled his automobile. Thomas was driving way too fast for conditions and not wearing his seatbelt. He was thrown from his vehicle and sustained injuries that killed him 16 days after the accident. His mother sued General Motors arguing that the company hadn’t done enough to make the vehicle safe in rollover, even though the only person in the car wearing a seatbelt walked away from the accident unharmed (a third person who was unbelted died at the scene).
A jury this week rejected the lawsuit, voting 10-2 not to award Thomas’ family any damages.
Well, there are still at least 10 sane people left in lawsuit happy America.
Source:
GM Wins In Derrick Thomas Wrongful Death Trial. The KansasCityChannel.Com, August 18, 2004.