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The real damage from GM bankruptcy: Layoffs

Posted Jun 01 2009, 06:35 PM by Catherine Holahan
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Car insurance © AbleStock/Jupiterimages General Motors' (GM) long-anticipated bankruptcy announcement on Monday didn't send investors running from the markets. If anything, they responded with relief to the news that GM would file for Chapter 11. The Dow actually rose 221 points as the storied automaker wiped out shareholders and erased much of the $172 billion it owed creditors.

But GM's bankruptcy could yet send the rallying market into reverse.

Though the $30 billion in taxpayer money granted by the Obama administration saved GM from liquidation, it didn't solve the automaker's two main problems: too much production, too few buyers. To address those, GM will lay off tens of thousands of employees in the next 30 to 60 days and cause hundreds of thousands more to lose their jobs. Those layoffs, in turn, will likely fuel increases in weekly unemployment claims -- dragging down the economy and potentially delaying any 2009 recovery.

"There is a big potential hit to the economy," says Art Wheaton, an industry labor expert at Cornell University. "A typical assembly plant has a multiplier effect of 10 jobs . . . a lot of these folks are going to go immediately to the state unemployment line."

As many as 1.3 million jobs could be lost this year related to GM and Chrysler's bankruptcy restructuring effort, according to the Center for Automotive Research. Some of those would stem from plant closings. Many more would result from GM and Chrysler slashing the number of their dealerships and cutting production, leading to fewer sales for parts suppliers and manufacturers.

In a news conference following the bankruptcy filing, CEO Fritz Henderson said GM would lay off nearly 15% of its salaried North American work force, more than 10,000 people, in the next two months. It will also close another 2,100 dealerships, likely eliminating more than 100,000 jobs in the process, says Wheaton.

"We will close more plants and reduce hours," Henderson said.

The new, leaner GM will have about 40,000 hourly employees by 2010, Henderson said. That's about 21,000 fewer hourly employees than GM had at the end of 2008.

Chrysler's restructuring efforts will also pile ex-workers and dealership employees onto the unemployment rolls. Chrysler is eliminating nearly 790 dealerships in advance of a June 9 deadline. Those dealerships employ about 40,000 people.

President Obama has acknowledged that GM's bankruptcy -- though better than worst-case scenarios for the company, its employees and taxpayers -- will swell the ranks of the unemployed.

"Building a leaner GM will come at a cost," Obama said. "It will take a painful toll on many Americans who have relied on General Motors throughout the generations."

Speaking directly to the Americans who rely on the auto industry for a paycheck, he added:

"I know you have already seen more than your fair share of hard times. I will not pretend the hard times are over. Difficult days lie ahead. More jobs will be lost. More plants will close. More dealerships will shut their doors and so will many parts suppliers."

Investors know the layoffs are coming, as sure as they knew that GM and Chrysler were heading for Chapter 11. What's less clear is whether investors have truly factored in how the rise in joblessness will impact the broader economy and the eventual recovery.  

Recently, many investors have bought stock on signs that the worst is over. They have pinned their hopes on positive trends such as declines in weekly unemployment claims. Just last week, the market rose after the U.S. Labor Department announced that initial unemployment claims fell for the second straight week -- dropping 13,000 to 623,000.

The impact of GM and Chrysler's restructuring efforts on the job market could reverse that trend. Such a negative turn around could spook investors, driving them from the market.

Related Links:

What GM's bankruptcy means for you

Talk back: Would you ever buy a GM or Chrysler car?

GM's demise has a silver lining: AutoZone

The long, slow descent of GM

GM: Subprime lending? Great idea!

Comments

 

Seems like everybody ended up getting what they wanted - A GM bankruptcy.  Now you all will know what trickle down is.  Between these international companies scouring the earth for the cheapest minerals, commodities and labor now the government is subsidising them to do so.  Well you wanted it, you got it Toyota.  Just remember that any job or profession can be undercut by outsourcing or insourcing professionals and jobs.  Good luck America.   This wasn't my grandpa's vision.

What about other people that lost their jobs?  Whaaaaa.....  The Big 3 should have been out long time ago....

Do the job losses at GM, Crysler, and the closed dealerships go againt Obama's jobs saved or created promise.

GM and Chrysler have nothing to do with going bankrup...the US government did it to us. 6-8 airbags, emmission controls, bumper to bumper crash tests, on and on. Does India, China, Russia, France, Italy and all the like have or do the same? NOT!!! All this adds up to 5-$10,000 extra.....................

Before the filing strip clubs in Detroit were giving $10 lap dances, due to the poo local economy.  I wonder how cheap a lap dance will go for in 90 days onces the streets are filled with the unemployed.

www.wheresthestripclub.com

The day GM Makes an AWD car that feels as nimble yet solid as my Audi, I'll half consider buying it. Give the customer what they want, or get out of the market.

I grew up and around mechanics my entire life. It's hit or miss on reliability whether you go import or GM/CHRYSLER/FORD. The biggest difference is service after buying the car. US automakers just didn't stand by their product.  Sad but True!

I have been saying for years that the US marketing of land vehicles through dealerships was long overdue for an overhaul.  It had moved away from the end user as the customer and made the dealerships the customer.  High pressure sales of dealer ordered vehicles vs customer orders has been eroding the vehicle industry since the 1980s. Now finally they may wise up. but I doubt it.  

Forced labor unions, government intervention, and no change in marketing strategy is a recipe for complete failure.  The US public pumping billions of their tax payer dollars into these businesses, just to subsidize failing labor unions is complete madness. Its the same stupidity the follows the idealistic notion that giving high priced homes to low income families will solve poverty issues.  Everyone can not be wealthy, but everyone can be poor.  The current economic situation is evidence that the idea (originating in Chicago and California) of the USA being a total service economy has and always will be wrong.  We can not import more than we export, we need to manufacture our own goods, we need to base our manufacturing on customer orders, its just plain economics.  

Finally lets look at layoffs, with many being salaried or related to business or plant closings, they will receive a severance package (60 to 90 days). These severance packages will delay the actual impact on the states (remember those forks are near financial disaster now) unemployment numbers, until late summer 2009. We will see states that will not be able to support their unemployed at that time (15% -20% unemployment).  

Lets face it,  no amount of tax payer money will bring these vehicle companies back to life. The current administration is just flushing our money down the toilet.  Banks failing? let them fail. Vehicle manufacturers failing? let them fail. The end result will be the same. This propping up of failed businesses will inevitably lead to the same conclusion. The only outcome in following the current administrations logic is that these companies will fail but the tax payers will invest hundreds of billions making it occur.  I say cut them loose.  No more bailouts.  Support the surviving companies.  Make sure those companies that are keeping 80 precent of the population employed, remain solvent.  Let the dead wood go.

the american dream is fading......

the american dream faded it will hert retireres for years to come NO MORE GM NO MORE BENAFITS 30 YEARS HARD LABOR THEN GM FORGETS YOU........

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