The proposed bailout of the Big Three is really only a bailout of the UAW!
If GM does go into Chapter 11 bankruptcy, all that does is allow them to restructure...GM has 7,000 dealers! Toyota & Honda - between them - have less than 2,500!
How many lines of autos does GM have in the US? 7 (Chevrolet, Buick, Saturn, Pontiac, GM, Cadillac, Hummer) Why does GM need all 7 of theirs? Restructuring allows them to get rid of 3 or 4 divisions. How many US divisions does Toyota have? 3. How many for Honda? 2.
The Big Three are tied into the UAW & its huge labor cost! Toyota & Honda have labor costs that are almost half of the Big Three! Bankruptcy would allow the Big Three to renegotiate contracts with unions and suppliers, get rid of marginally profitable dealerships, and focus on restructuring to be more profitable.
Here's a few other things most people don't know about the UAW stranglehold on the Big Three:
1) The UAW Jobs Banks $400,000,000 annual program that keeps 12,000 workers on the payroll even though their jobs were done away with by automation...yep, the UAW didn't downsize when the Big Three found a better way to build cars, they demanded a "job bank" to keep the downsized workers on the payroll <span style="text-decoration: underline">doing nothing</span>! Here's a link about the program from the "Detroit News":
https://www.detnews.com/2005/autosinsider/0510/17/A01-351179.htm
2) $17,000,000 that GM spends for Viagra annually for employees & retirees - not to mention how much Chrysler & Ford spend under their UAW contracts.
https://www.consumeraffairs.com/news04/2006/04/gm_viagra.html
3) The UAW's Big Three membership is down by about 40% since 2003, when the last national contract was finalized. At GM, the union had 250,000 members in 1994, but is down to about 75,000 members now. Yet, $1,600 of every GM car goes toward the healthcare cost of union workers - a figure that has steadily grown with each new union contract. At Toyota & Honda, that cost hovers around $1,000 per car!
4)
https://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081115/ap_on_bi_ge/auto_bailout_gettelfinger said:
Even as Detroit's Big Three teeter on collapse, United Auto Workers President Ron Gettelfinger said Saturday that the problem is not the union's contract with the automakers and that getting the automakers back on their feet means figuring out a way to turn around the slumping economy.
"The focus has to be on the economy as a whole as opposed to a UAW contract," Gettelfinger told reporters on a conference call, noting the labor costs now make up 8 percent to 10 percent of the cost of a vehicle.
Instead, Gettelfinger blamed the problems the auto industry is suffering from on things beyond its control — the housing slump, the credit crunch that has made financing a vehicle tough and the 1.2 million jobs that have been lost in the past year.
And, if the Big Three do go into bankruptcy, that does not mean all the auto manudacturing factories close & all the employees lose their jobs & all the dealerships & suppliers close....by & large, if the Big Three went into Chapter 11 bankruptcy we wouldn't see any major differences anywhere except for the few dealerships that would switch from GM lines to another manufacturer! No huge unemployment lines! No suppliers closing! No differences! If you'd like, I can explain why ther'd be no major changes anywhere.
However, if the bailout goes through, why would people suddenly start buying their products? Only 1 reason: tax credits! Yep, the Congress will tie tax credits for buying Big Three cars to any bail out. And they'll never tell us how much that costs us - they'll only tell us how much they want to give the Big Three.