Monday, December 15, 2008

Bill Kristol Thinks We're Being Too Hard on the Big Three

Another Monday, another Bill Kristol column (alas). Today Kristol talks about the auto bailout and how harsh the CEOs of the auto companies are being treated. He claims that the left and the right are piling on to these folks and a lot of the scorn they are receiving is undeserved. While I have little doubt that many politicians' motivations in all of this is to get their face on television as a populist, for-the-people kind of guy (I'm looking at you, David Vitter), how much of the scorn is undeserved?

I'll go back to a few quotes from Bob Lutz, GM's vice chariman and car guru. He stated back in January that not only was global warming a "crock of shit," but hybrid cars, like Toyota's, "make no economic sense." This from the company that gave civilians the Hummer. But I ask you this question: which company is begging for our (read: taxpayer) money? Is it Toyota, where according to Lutz they make no economic sense? Or is it GM, Ford, and Chrysler, whose love of massive (unnecessary) vehicles which made their companies dependant on cheap oil, in an era where we were going to war with one of the most oil-rich regions of the world? Because, as we saw the price of oil go up we saw demand (and prices) for big cars like Suburbans, Explorers, and Hummers hit the basement while more fuel-efficient cars (such as hybrids) saw an increase in both demand and price.

So what about these companies? Letting them fall into bankruptcy, while being a good step for those companies' futures, would be a hard pill for the economy as a whole to swallow. If we give them the money they want, there is little guarantee that they will change their business practices and we could end up in this position again years (or decades) down the road. The problem here is the dichotomy between administration and laborers. It is clear that the majority of the downfall of these companies lies with the administration; they are the ones making the decisions and guiding the company. While letting the companies go bankrupt would allow the punishment of these ill-guided executives, it would also hurt the laborers. This is not to say that the UAW is innocent in all of this; their ability to get management to concede to costly demands has also hurt the company. But to say that every laborer is with the union would be a grave error. Having been in a union or two myself, I can tell you right now that the union does not, in any way, speak for every worker (for example, I am sure there are some GM workers out there who would have conceded a pay raise for the next two years in order to get the bailout through the Senate rather than risk massive layoffs).

As my friend Nate Kaufman pointed out two weeks ago, the price of gas is going back down. This will lead those with short term memory loss (remember the 70s?) to go out and buy back their Suburbans and Explorers, while those with foresight will remember the pain at the pump and get more fuel efficient, mostly foreign cars. What people tend to forget is that oil is a commodity traded on the international market. Combine this with the fact that the world is essentially at the mercy of an oil cartel, and you have a recipe for severe instability. Just because oil is down now, does not mean it will stay down.

The way I see the whole situation is like this: the auto companies are addicts. They are addicted to big cars, oil, and ignorant business decisions. In order to score these drugs, they need money. They're turning to the taxpayer, saying, "Please. If you give me this money I will clean my act up, get sober, and be a productive member of society." Anyone who has ever had any significant interaction with an addict knows that their words mean nothing; they will do anything to score. They may clean up for a week or two, but given the chance they go right back to the dope. The way to get an addict clean is this: they hit rock bottom and instead of enabling them, you get them into treatment. Sometimes they hit rock bottom on their own, other times friends and family have to bring rock bottom to them (refusing to talk to them or enable them). The addict realizes how bad their situation is and seeks treatment. Rock bottom for the Big Three would be bankruptcy, treatment would be the restructering that would have to occur under bankruptcy. The government has a choice: continue to enable these companies, or bring rock bottom to them and force them to restructure.




So back to the original question: do the execs of these companies deserve the scorn they've received, or should we, like Kristol would like, be a little easier on them? While we could look at years of mismanagement and the out-of-touch attitude that the Big Three have demonstrated, I think one fact is emblematic of the entire affair. When asked to come to Congress to make their case for a bailout, the three CEOs came in three separate private jets. So to rebut Kristol's assertion that the CEOs of the Big Three are being treated unfairly, they have thrown conventional wisdom to the wind, denied scientific proof of global climate change, and claimed that their competitors were bad businessmen. The private jet thing - that was just a big FU to the taxpayer. Peace.

Photos - The Big Three and Congress (ABC News), GM CEO Rick Wagoner (Political Bounce),

3 comments:

  1. GM's is being bled like a stuck pig and I've got a paper trail to prove it.

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  2. And while the House and Dems in the Senate tried to tackle the auto bailout with stipulations that would begin to address energy efficiency and climate change, Mitch McConnell and his buddies watered the bill down until it was barely worth passing, then killed it anyway. Guess it's up to the Bush Administration to save 3 million jobs?

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