The real reason a Big Three bailout is a bad idea

The hope is that billions of dollars will succeed where hundreds of millions failed

by Andrew Coyne on Thursday, November 20, 2008 8:00am - 103 Comments

The real reason a Big Three bailout is a bad idea

Everyone has his own favourite story of Big Auto’s stupidity. Mine is the Great Invisible Japanese Trade Wall of the 1980s. At the time, Detroit was bellowing to the skies that Japan was keeping American cars out of its market, the better to support its case for restricting sales of Japanese cars in the U.S. If it was unclear how the Japanese were supposed to be doing this—Japan’s trade barriers were if anything rather lower than America’s—that only seemed to provoke Detroit to further heights of indignation: those inscrutable Orientals, with their mysterious, subtle ways. Of course you couldn’t see how they did it! That’s why it was so effective!

Until someone pointed out that the cars the Big Three were pressing upon the Japanese consumer were left-hand drive, suitable for driving on the right side of the road. It seems Japan drives on the left. Who knew?

Oh well. We could swap stories like this for hours—of Detroit’s confusing mélange of largely identical brands, its insipid designs and approximate quality, its overpaid workforce and cretinous management, its insistence on pushing gas-guzzlers and luxury cars out the door even as oil prices soared and the economy tanked. But however long a bill of indictment might be brought against Big Auto, that’s not why we should refuse its demands for a bailout. This isn’t about punishing Detroit for its past misdeeds. It isn’t even about the auto industry, as such. It’s about the economy as a whole, and how scarce resources are allocated between competing uses. Ultimately, it’s about physics: the simple, inescapable reality that more of one thing means less of another.

Also at Macleans.ca: The decline of the North American car

Anyone proposing to bail out the auto industry, in whatever amount, is obliged at the least to answer the question: where does the money come from? The answer is not simply “the taxpayer.” If that were all, the immediate objection—why should taxpayers be dragooned into paying for cars that consumers won’t?—might be answered: because the alternative is worse. Indeed, bailout proponents argue, not bailing out the auto industry might cost the taxpayer even more.

But the cost of such subsidies is not borne only or even primarily by the taxpayer, but by all those industries and firms that don’t get bailed out. It’s what economists call the opportunity cost: all the capital that subsidy traps in one industry is capital denied to other industries; all the sales diverted to one firm are sales diverted from its rivals; all the jobs “created” in one part of the economy are jobs destroyed elsewhere. Indeed, the cost of subsidy grows rather worse the more the subsidy “succeeds.” For then the diversion, from the efficient and competitive to the inefficient and uncompetitive, is made permanent.

Not that there’s much danger of that in the present case. The more likely scenario is that which befell the British auto industry in the 1970s: a sinkhole of declining sales and deepening losses that grows worse the more public dollars that are thrown into it, until at last the farce can no longer be sustained. But why hypothesize about the future? That’s exactly what we have been doing, in one form or another, since the original Chrysler bailout of 1980. Whether you call it subsidies, or tariffs, or “voluntary export restraints,” or innovation funds, or location incentives, we’ve been bailing out the North American auto industry for most of the last 30 years. And the only result has been a remorseless loss of market share, from 95 per cent in 1962 to 80 per cent in 1980 to 44 per cent today.

So the case for the bailout, even by the narrow measure of how it affects the auto industry, rests on the hope that billions of dollars will succeed where hundreds of millions have failed, that an industry in the hands of Nancy Pelosi and Tony Clement—who wants the industry, in return for public funds, to build “cars that people actually want to buy,” as if the industry needed him to tell it what these were—will find the wit to compete that has eluded it until now. But of course subsidy has exactly the opposite effect. It protects the industry, not so much from competition as from the consumer, just as it spares it from innovation, defends it from efficiency, saves it from sanity. Subsidy is not the solution. It’s the problem: the single biggest reason the industry is so overbuilt in the first place. Yes, the credit crisis has hit sales hard, across the industry. But you don’t notice Honda and Toyota standing around with their hands out.

But what is the alternative? To listen to the industry and its apologists, vaporization: all those factories shuttered, all those hundreds of thousands of jobs vanished, as if in a nuclear attack. But that’s not, in fact, what typically happens in a bankruptcy. Rather, GM—or Chrysler, or Ford—would gain the time and space to reschedule its debts, renegotiate its labour contracts, and otherwise reorganize itself, assuming there is any prospect of it doing so. But even in the worst-case of liquidation, the factories do not simply go up in smoke. Somebody would have to fill the demand that Detroit had previously supplied, and the fastest and cheapest way for other manufacturers, foreign or domestic, to ramp up production would be to buy up all that unused capacity.

The question, then, is not whether the North American auto industry as we have known it can be saved, but whether it is worth saving. Unless it’s the other way around.

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  • Ron

    Amen…the point is made that the North American car industry is not worth sinking in unlimited amount of tax payers dollars…bankruptcy, and a less overpaid workforce, and hopefully the design and manufacturing of models that consumer actually are interested in, may be the best that could happen to the industry since 1980.

  • Kevin

    Oh. I forgot to mention that a year ago I got a Toyota Camry Hybrid. Amazing car…saving a bundle on gas, insurance, maintainence only about $125 toal up to 25km…a $2000 Fed rebate and $500 a year during my 4 year lease. Free car wash every Sat. The customer service at Toyota is amazing.

    I bought Chrysler for years but when it was time for a new car they had absolutely nothing I wanted. I had to rent a GM Pontiac recently…a piece of garbage by comparison.

  • John

    Having read most of the comments I would like to bring this back to what we might expect to happen. I am in favor of allowing the marketplace to decide the outcome of the big 3. The eventual meltdown will be a very hard blow to many in the industry and I would look to government(s) to assist where possible. I think a payout from the accumulated pension plans would go a long way to soften the pain. If we allow these continual payouts and buyouts to happen there is no control over the purse strings. I think one of the comments made earlier says it best – allow the shakedown to happen and then put in the controls necessary to keep track of the industry. The industry has been good to some and provided an over-abundance to those mucky muks who show up in their jets and have no flipping idea how to fix the problems other than to get mega bucks and take another vacation. Let the free market and democracy work —- or lose it

  • Bob S.

    So now those poor automakers want to pick our pockets via the government?

    As an already overburdened taxpayer I strenuously object to this sort of corporate welfare. I have been driving for nearly 50 years and for the past few decades have made a conscious and rational decision to NOT buy North American designed Chrysler, GM, or Ford vehicles. They have been creating too many products with poor quality, poor engineering, inferior reliability, excessive depreciation, high parts and service costs, and all built by overpaid workers. Why should we now be FORCED through our taxes, to prop up these manufacturers that we have DELIBERATELY chosen to NOT support?

    We already have the unemployment insurance system; we have labour unions who could step up and open bloated contracts, or actually buy equity positions in their ‘essential’ companies, especially now that share prices are depressed; and ultimately we have better-managed manufacturers who could step in and buy up the assets of the failing ‘big three’ and use the facilities to make the sort of products we would VOLUNTARILY purchase.

    Please, politicians, serve the citizenry rather than the special interests for a change, and do not permit more picking of taxpayers’ pockets! If you don’t have the spine, put it to a referendum … then you can blame US.

  • Robert the Bruce

    Interesting to see the number of Conservative bashers blogging here.

  • amabaie

    As usual, Andrew Coyne hits the nail on the head. Everything is a trade-off, and if we withdraw resources from one place, we don’t have them elsewhere. It was the same issue with the price of oil. When oil goes up, not only do many things become more expensive, but we also have to divert funds from “other things” to pay for car fuel and heating fuel. Bailing out the auto sector just increases the price of our cars…diverting funds away from buying other things.

    I just zoomed this article:
    http://automotive.zoomit.ca/the-real-reason-a-big-three-bailout-is-a-bad-idea/

  • Chris B

    I am just going to repost this because there are two more references to UAW wokers making more than$70/hr

    that $70 average figure is wrong. According ot the New Republic, it has been arrived at by adding the average wage ($28/hr) plus all benefits owed ($42/hr). This includes all benefits owed to retirees, includng their health care. All they did to come up with that figure is divide the TOTAL number of benefits owed, by current employees and it works out to $70/hr. However there are a lot more retirees than current employees. And they have defned benefit pension plans and skyrocketing health insurance bills

    So the relevant consideration is that UAW employees of the Detroit Three are paid, on average, $28/hr. WHich is a good wage, but hardly sky high. And in fact, it follows on the precepts of Fordism, which states that you should pay your employees enough to buy your product.

  • mit

    Let’s see – Foreign Automakers wanted to build cars in North America – So our governments gave them money to do it. Seemed like a good idea at the time – they build small cars with tight profit margins – The big 3 build the pick up trucks – Caddy’s and Lincolns – Then the Foreign Automakers wanted to build higher end cars – so the governments give them more money – The big 3 still had Pick Up trucks and Minivans – Then the Foreign Automakers wanted to build pick ups and minivans – More government incentives. Hmmm! – Maybe things are not as simple as it seems.

  • mit

    Support for the Auto Industry should come from consumer incentives – take the GST – PST off new vehicle purchases – people trade up – better fuel economy and better economy. Take a serious look at the cost of ownership of a vehicle – insurance – licences – environmental fees – We are suppose to have the safest roads in North America here in Ontario – We have tough speeding – drinking while driving laws/penalties and a graduated licence system for young drivers and more restrictions on the way. Seems like all these initiatives would make insurance costs go down would it not?
    Making the border between our countries a little less restrictive to trade and reducing border delays might help the industry also.

  • http://Google Chris

    With over 600 million dollars in government subsities given to the big three auto makers and all they ask for more, more, more.
    What people want in a automobile is a Small, reliable, fuel effecient car, and the big three auto makers don’t make those. The big three made bigger trucks and muscel cars. Actually the big three don’t even make money on their cars, they loose money on the manufacture to make the big bucks on the after market parts.
    After market parts for vehicels in North America are over 260 billion dollars a year. So why would you build a quality vehicel when you can make your money on selling parts. This is why you will never see a all electric car. You do see the duel auto’s which use gas and electic engines, but this will only mean more parts needed to fix the growing pains with the changeing back and forth from both of these engines. Think of all the money you can make on two engines not working properly.
    This is why you will never see an all electric car and why it is illegal to have a all electric car that goes over 40 km an hour. There are about 30 moving parts in a electric car that will have to be replaced, and where is the money in that?

  • http://Google Erica

    Hey, Chrysler makes the Jeep Cherokee, the biggest piece of crap and the most expencive vehicel to repair, do I really need to say more.

  • john g

    Chris B, you are correct, the $73 per hour is the total loaded labour rate.

    However, by comparison, the same figure for Honda/Toyota/Nissan is $43 per hour.

  • Justin

    Hold on to your hats FOLKS because we are in for one hell of a ride. Our economy and infrastructure are stronger and more organized then that of our brother, the USA. However, Obama has so many difficulties that he faces in his duties to get the USA back on track. I think that the damage to the economy is much more than what is told to us through the news etc… And we are going to feel some sort repercussion from it!

    We are in a world of change when it comes to issues of money, the economy, health care, infrastructure, foreign relations, and the fact that China and Russia are becoming major power houses in this world. The fact that China and Russia are taking part in military affairs is an indication that maybe down the road they’ll join forces to conquer the western world. Not only that, the USA has so many problems that are so large that one could quite possibly come to the conclusion that it is irreparable.

    I think the US auto manufacturers had it coming to them just as the heads of the large banking corporations do. There are more exotic luxurious cars for sale on the market then there ever was, I wonder why?

    The American auto manufacturers do not deserve what they are asking for when they show up for a meeting with the senate in private luxurious jets. What kind of people are these head corporate executives of Ford, Chrysler,and General Motors? I will tell what they are: Greedy!

    The people who are middle class are going to be in a new social bracket quite soon: poor!

  • Duane

    What a great country we have, Leave us alone and don’t interfere as long as we are profitable and our CEO’s can bring down big bucks, but as soon as we are in trouble financially please help us so we can keep bringing in the big bucks, but oh yes we now know how to be profitable again thanks to the freebees. Give we ordinary Joes a break OK.

  • Ryan

    I also have a product no one wants to buy, bail me out, I’ll keep on making my product and no one will continue to buy it. Problem solved. Good day.

  • E.A.M

    Two things -

    Pete E
    I work for Toyota and have a University Degree…… I left a higher paying job (where I held a great deal of responsibility and had numerous achievements) for a chance at a healthier/ stress free life. I take offense to your generalization of auto workers……. let me tell you that at the end of a 9.5 hour shift my body’s telling me I earned every one of those $28.00….

    Dave C.
    Your Pontiac Vibe was actually built at the NUMMI plant in California – a joint venture between Toyota and GM….. It’s built on the Matrix Platform – so I’m sure you’ll have no problem getting parts…..

  • Chas

    Lots of interesting opinions. Letting the Big 3 declare bankruptcy, if it comes to that, wouldn’t be so bad, but the bailout should come in the form of taking over the pension plans. It’s really very sad that folks who spent many years working in good faith, have to take the hit now, when they’re not able to do anything else to improve their financial situation.

    If any other form of bailout is considered, it should have very tight and enforceable conditions attached. The current management is clearly not to be trusted to make the right decisions for a viable industry.

  • Harley Thompson

    The big 3 has agreed to all the union demands that make there health & benifit plans so costly, now they have to live or die with the the result of there decisions.I cannot agree to have my tax dollars paying for these benifits while still paying for a far less benifit package for myself.

    There has to be a re negoation of these benifits which are driving there cost to a non competive position
    There is no way they can continue and be profitable untill they make the tough decisions that they should of made long ago.

  • Hector

    Is very paradoxic that those 3 carmakers have made billions in profits all this years in the so called capitalism/free market enterprise which doesn’t allow government interference in how the make their money. Now that they can’t make the money they want , they want the government to put them out of their misery. This is called socialism, but socialism works only for the masses in need , not the greed of
    corporations.

  • Duane

    What ever happened to market capitalism? When economic times are good, private industry does’nt share with the taxpayer. The Big 3 have made their own bed, now let them sleep in it.

  • Allan McElroy

    Funny, I just commented in the Globe and Mail website about exactly Andrew’s point; the auto industry and/or its workers getting help at the expense of other industries. I am in the furniture business and have watched it get gutted over the last few years as a result of the high Canadian dollar and cheap imports. There weren’t any subsidies for them; they sucked it up and made do with less, or went broke. Let the Big Three all go broke; what’ll come out the other end will be leaner and better.

  • JRH

    Harley makes a good point about how management capitulated to the union’s demands for pensions and retiree benefits, but these plans were structured in a different era, with different accounting rules. FASB changes in the US sounded the death-knell for the Detroit 3, and Canadian accounting standards have followed the same course. Post-employment health benefits and defined-benefit pensions have become compensation dodos, caused primarily by financial accountability to recognize the long-term basis of the liabilities. Allowing the Detroit 3 to fail and reorganize would allow the restructuring of these obligations. The Detroit 3 have headed into the perfect storm: products deemed inferior by their customers with labour agreements from another time.

  • yichen

    Why do Canadians keep calling Big 3 as “DOMESTIC”?

    To my knowlege, GM, Ford, and Chrysler are all companies of United States of America, and USA is definitely a FOREIGN country.

    I know Big 3 have plants and employ people in Canada, but so do Toyota and Honda. Futhermore, instead of cutting jobs and closing plants, Toyota is actually opeing new plants and hiring more local Canadians.

    So, please tell me why Canadians treat American big three like they are our own with such a fuzzy feeling, and in the same time, treat Japanese auto makers with hostility?

    Is it because Canadian is white, America is white, but Japan is yellowish? Or because after staying in the shadow of America for so long, Canada already subconsciously think itself as a state of USA.

  • http://NoBail-out Cherie O.

    Here are 3 reasons for the problems with the auto industry. Simply…

    #1…The US Congress putting their noses into how companies must produce their project.
    Congressmen have NEVER been in business and do not know BEANS about manufacturing.
    They are a bunch of lawyers who can stand up and TALK and not know what they are talking about.

    #2… The UNIONS have demanded more and more in benefits, salaries & pensions and have priced
    the American Big 3 out of competition. The Union bosses think THEY know how to run a business as well…and they are just a lot of ‘hot air’ too.

    #3…The management of the Big 3 have not STOOD UP to both Congress and the Unions…and kept
    going along with their demands. The only alternative was to ‘out-source’ and that made the Union Bosses and the workers upset.

    The only alternative for the Big 3….is BANKRUPTCY…dump the unions…and tell Congress either THEY WILL PRODUCE their autos or they will ship them abroad….and start all over from scratch.

    Lastly, if the Government bails out the Big 3…and owns and directs…more money will have to be given to them to keep them going again in another 6 months…and here we go again. Same for utilities, energy, healthcare and the list goes on and on. Socialism is HERE NOW and just be more as time goes on. Capitolism and free-markets is dead…and America is going down in the process just like in Europe. Socialism has NEVER WORKED and it won’t work in USA either.

    It’s time to DUMP Nancy P. Reid, Dodd and that whole gang before it is too late.

    The Fianancial crisis is the fault of CONGRESS and that same GANG is there to try and fix it…CAN’T BE DONE…the guys that set the fire…are the same ones trying to put the fire out! What a joke!

  • Pat

    Why should we waste our hard earned money on their hard earned debt? Their arrogance is second to none. Let them bite the bullet and perhaps they’ll learn to build cars the Japanese way.

    If I am not mistaken, the US auto makers are caught in a vicious circle … in order to pare down costs, they buy the cheapest (price/quality) parts available and put them into vehicles that eventually break down sooner than later, which in turn drives consumers away from their so called vehicles. The bad thing is that once bitten by such a bug, no matter what is done to revitalize the auto industry, they will sooner or later get back into that mode.

    Pity the poor workers for they’re really the innocent victims of grotesque mismanagement.

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