GM and the UAW

RightField

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So, what do you think of this myopic set of actions on the part of the UAW? This is the behavior that we're being asked to pay for through a bailout. No wonder Toyota is cleaning their clock. What are your thoughts on the subject?


UAW's 'legacy' at GM

By Ralph R. Reiland
Monday, January 12, 2009

General Motors lost $10.6 billion in 2006. GM lost another $38.7 billion in 2007, the largest annual loss in automotive history. Through the third quarter of 2008, GM lost another $21.2 billion.

On Sept. 24, 2007, a year during which GM lost an average of $3.2 billion per month, the United Auto Workers launched a national strike against the company, ordering the shutdown of 80 GM plants in the United States. More than 73,000 UAW-represented factory workers walked off the job and hit the picket lines.

The UAW said that GM had failed to address job security issues during negotiations.

"No one wants to see GM go down the tubes," said picketing Jim Brown. "But we have to keep our standard of living, and GM is going to have to cooperate."

GM's labor cost for a factory worker at the time was $71 per hour, with $27 per hour going to current workers and the remainder made up of costs for pensions and health care for retirees. If archaic work rules and other contract mandates reduced productivity at GM's plants by half, the company's real labor costs were $142 per hour of work counting retiree costs and $54 per hour for current labor.

On Feb. 26, 2008, a UAW strike at five American Axle plants, a key GM supplier and the sole axle supplier for the Chevrolet Tahoe and GMC Yukon, stopped or slowed production at 30 of GM's North American factories and crippled GM's pickup truck and SUV production throughout the United States.

"The American Axle strike cost GM $800 million in the first three months of the year and 100,000 vehicles of lost production, which GM said was mostly felt in fleet sales to commercial customers," reported the Detroit News on May 12, 2008. "The automaker on Thursday pledged up to $200 million to American Axle to help end the dispute. The money would be used to pay for buyouts, early retirement and cash incentives to get workers who stay to accept lower wages."

That's a billion dollars, extracted out of GM to buy labor peace at a plant they didn't own.

Seven weeks later, on April 17, a UAW-ordered work stoppage over a work rule dispute at GM's Lansing Delta plant in Michigan halted production of the Saturn Outlook, GMC Acadia and Buick Enclave.

Less than three weeks later, on May 5, 2008, workers walked off the job at GM's Kansas City plant over work rules and seniority disputes. "The United Auto Workers union struck -- literally -- General Motors where it hurt the most, at the automaker's Kansas City factory that builds the fast-selling Chevrolet Malibu, already in tight supply," reported Edmunds AutoObserver.

With the Kansas City plant handling the bulk of Malibu production, the UAW strike was called four months after Malibu won the North American Car of the Year award at the North American International Auto Show.

As one of GM's few success stories in recent decades, the 2008 sales of Malibu in January, February and March were 110 percent greater than in the same quarter in 2007, with Malibu cutting into the market shares of Honda Accord and Toyota Camry.

General Motors, in short, had finally produced a car that the public really wanted and the guys walked out.

Stopping production of a hot-selling, profitable model at a time of declining auto sales and rising levels of red ink is "stupidity of the highest order" on the part of the UAW, said David Cole, chairman of the Center for Automotive Research.

On July 16, 2008, the UAW called a strike against a Johnson Controls plant in Tennessee that supplies GM with consoles and seats for the Chevrolet Traverse crossover vehicle. "The strike has the potential to disrupt production of the Traverse, one of the new vehicles GM is counting on to offset declining sales of its full-size trucks and SUVs," explained Reuters reporter Kevin Krolicki.

"We want a flawless launch for this vehicle," UAW Local 1853 President Mike O'Rourke told Reuters, "but it's going to be with union seats and union consoles."

And so, at last count, GM has lost $70 billion since 2004, the number of UAW members has been cut in half since 2004 at GM, Chrysler and Ford, from 300,000 to 150,000, and the rest of us are now stuck with the tab for the rescue.

Ralph R. Reiland is an associate professor of economics at Robert Morris University and a local restaurateur. He can be reached at via e-mail.
 
Malibus and Traverses and whatever else "works" in the GM lineup will be built by the New GMC (general motors China) within 2 years...and sold in the parking lots at WalMarts.

The old GM dealers will sell their land for condos.

UAW workers will be working in Call Centers.

Life will go on.
 
Malibus and Traverses and whatever else "works" in the GM lineup will be built by the New GMC (general motors China) within 2 years...and sold in the parking lots at WalMarts.

The old GM dealers will sell their land for condos.

UAW workers will be working in Call Centers.

Life will go on.

"Cap and Trade" will take care of the rest of US industry. The Chinese are chomping at the bit. They know damn well where the new plants will be built.

Ishmael
 
"Cap and Trade" will take care of the rest of US industry. The Chinese are chomping at the bit. They know damn well where the new plants will be built.

Ishmael

Exactly; like I said in your thread last week, balking on buying paper in the short term is a muscle flex.

Will new GM's come with the extra nuts and bolts like gas barbeques do?
 
Exactly; like I said in your thread last week, balking on buying paper in the short term is a muscle flex.

Will new GM's come with the extra nuts and bolts like gas barbeques do?

Congress and the Treasury nerds think it's a smoke screen, or they've decided to play chicken with the economy.

It's also the reason the Chinese are playing the "You first" game with the cap and trade. And by God, Waxman appears to be hell bent for leather to accomodate them. When it's all over we'll say, "OK, now it's your turn."

And they'll reply, "Are you fucking nuts????????? You really don't expect us to ruin our economy the way you did do you?"

Ishmael
 
I won't waste my time reading that copy and paste job. I do hope that now that the Democrat Party dominates the country, the United Autoworkers Union organizes all of the auto plants in the United States.
 
I wonder if Obama will sign the "Union strong-arm" bill. I think the libs call it "free-choice" or some super-spin title for it.
 
I say let the GM, Ford and Chrysler go down and then the UAW will have protected the jobs of whom? Unions are a god thing until they put the companies out of business that pay their workers. If the big 3 fold maybe there can be a new auto company take their place that doesn't have to cowtow to the UAW.
 
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