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General Motors to close 9 plants, slash 30,000 North American
jobs
By the Editorial Board
22 November 2005
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General Motors announced plans Monday to close or eliminate
shifts at nine assembly, stamping and powertrain plants and cut
30,000 hourly workers jobs in the US and Canada by the end
of 2008. The cost-cutting measures by the worlds largest
auto maker will have a devastating impact on workers, their families
and communities across North America.
The elimination of 22 percent of the North American workforce
is part of a major restructuring plan designed to boost profits
and raise share values for the companys stockholders. In
recent months, Wall Street investors have driven GM share values
to the lowest point in 18 years, and the companys credit
rating dropped to junk status. With losses of $5 billion this
year, analysts have predicted the company could slide into bankruptcy
within the next two years. Last week, CEO Rick Wagoner was forced
to reassure employees that GM had no intention of filing for bankruptcy.
Announcing the massive job-cutting program at the companys
Detroit headquarters Monday morning, Wagoner said the moves would
reduce structural costs by $6 billion and bring the companys
expenditures in line with our major global competitors.
He continued: In short, they are an essential part of our
plan to return our North American operations to profitability
as soon as possible.
GMs stock opened higher on the news, but turned lower
in afternoon trading as a growing number of investors and analysts
said the plan didnt go far enough. The plan is essentially
as expected, meaning not terribly aggressive, UBS analyst
Rob Hinchliffe wrote in a note to clients, adding that the companys
market share, which has been sliding, may fall further. He maintained
a sell rating on the stock and a price target of $20, below the
current price.
The following facilities are being targeted for closure or
mass layoffs:
* The Oklahoma City assembly plant will cease production in
early 2006
* The Lansing, Michigan Craft Centre and Metal Center stamping
plant will cease production in 2006
* The Spring Hill, Tennessee Plant/Line No. 1 will see production
end by late 2006
* The Doraville, Georgia, assembly plant will cease production
at the end of its current products life cycle in 2008
* The Third shift will be eliminated at the Oshawa, Ontario
plant in the second half of 2006. Oshawa Car Plant No. 2 will
end production after the current product runs out in 2008
* The St. Catharines Ontario Street West powertrain components
facility will end production in 2008
* The Flint, Michigan North 3800 engine plant will cease production
in 2008
* The Third shift will be ended at Moraine, Ohio during 2006
* The Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Metal Center will end production
in 2007
* Parts distribution centers in Portland, Oregon; St. Louis,
Missouri; Ypsilanti, Michigan and one other not-yet-named city
will be closed
All told, GM will reduce output by some 1 million units. Wagoner
also said more white-collar job cuts were planned for next year.
Since 2000, GM has cut its salaried work force by 32 percentto
36,000. By the end of next year, Wagoner said, the reduction will
reach 40 percentor another 2,500 jobs.
The downsizing measures are the most extensive since GM announced
in the early 1990s that it would close 21 assembly plants and
manufacturing operations, and cut 74,000 hourly and salaried jobs
by the middle of the decade. With the new round of cuts, GM will
reduce its blue-collar workforce to 86,000 US workers by the end
of 2008, roughly the number of people it employed in Flint, Michigan
alone in the 1970s. At its peak, GM employed more than 600,000
American workers.
The virtual collapse of GM highlights the general decline in
the position of US industry in the world market. Founded in 1908,
GM grew to become the worlds largest industrial concern,
dominating the global auto market in the 1950s and 1960s. By the
1970s, however, more efficient and higher-quality Asian and European
competitors challenged GM and other US auto makers, not only on
the world market but within the US market itself.
GM, which once sold one in two vehicles bought in America,
now controls less than 25 percent of the US market. On a world
scale, GMs market share has fallen to 15 percent and the
Japanese carmaker Toyotawhich is boosting outputis
expected to surpass it as the worlds biggest auto maker
next year.
This crisis has been exacerbated by rising fuel and commodity
prices, as well as falling demand for gas-guzzling light trucks
and SUVs. At the same time, there has been a rise in the cost
of health care for the companys 750,000 active and retired
workers and their dependents.
As in much of corporate America, an underlying crisis of profitability
at GM has coincided with accounting irregularities
and the subordination of any long-term business strategy to the
most immediate demands of wealthy investors and corporate executives.
Downsizing, wage-cutting and speedup have gone hand in hand with
the plundering of corporate resources by top executives, who routinely
hand themselves millions in annual salaries and bonuses. The entire
US corporate elite has become immersed in naked greed and criminality.
GM is currently under investigation by the US Securities and Exchange
Commission and recently acknowledged that it overstated its 2001
earnings by $400 million.
Financial speculation and swindling have grown apace, with
the most destructive consequences for the social and industrial
infrastructure of the country. With shares at the lowest level
since 1987, GM has a market capitalization of $12 billion. By
comparison, the stock market values Wal-Mart at $204 billion and
Google at $112 billion.
There is widespread speculation that Las Vegas casino mogul
Kirk Kerkorianwho built up a ten percent stake in GM over
the summerplans to take advantage of this situation to buy
the auto maker at a fire sale price. Analysts say he would then
sell off the companys most profitable assetssuch as
the GMAC financing armand push the car companyalong
with its pension and health care obligationsinto bankruptcy,
allowing him to walk away with billions.
The response of GMs executives has been to intensify
the attack on workers jobs and living standards. Last month
GM imposed unprecedented cutbacks in health care benefits, which
will add hundreds of dollars in out-of-pocket expenses for workers,
retirees and their families. Included in the agreement with the
United Auto Workers union is the setting up of a defined
contribution medical plan for retirees, the first step in
the elimination of guaranteed defined benefit health
care and pension plans for auto workers.
GMs announcement comes on the heels of last weeks
news that Delphi Automotivethe parts company that was spun
off by GM in 1999 and has now declared bankruptcywill eliminate
two-thirds of its workforce, or 24,000 workers. The company is
also seeking to impose a 60 percent wage cut on its workers and
abandon its pension obligations.
Ford Motor Company is expected to release its own plant closing
and job-cutting plans by the end of the year. Last week, the number
two US auto maker told employees it plans to eliminate 4,000 white
collar jobs in North America early next year as part of its restructuring
plan. The cuts will be in addition to 2,750 North American salaried
jobs that Ford earlier announced it wanted to cut by the end of
2005. Fords former parts maker, Visteon Corporation, recently
announced 1,500 job cuts.
Last year, 90,000 automotive jobs were wiped out in the US.
This is part of an international trend as corporations grapple
with a crisis of global overcapacity in the auto industry and
seek to shift production to countries with far lower wages. Volkswagen,
for example, is expected to announce plans to wipe out 14,000
jobs, the majority in Germany.
The United Auto Workers union made clear that it will not oppose
the destruction of jobs at GM. In a statement Monday, the UAW
described the catastrophe facing auto workers as disappointing,
unfair and unfortunate and said that the plant closings
and mass layoffs would be part of the negotiations for a new contract
with GM in 2007. Under the terms of the current agreement, GM
is supposedly prohibited from closing plants, so the auto maker
ceases production at targeted facilities and then
negotiates with the union to close them.
The UAW has long collaborated with the auto bosses in cutting
the jobs and living standards of auto workers in order to boost
the competitiveness of the US auto companies against their Japanese
and European rivals. Mondays announcement coincided with
news reports that the UAW was in negotiations with Ford and Chrysler
to impose health care concessions similar to those ceded to General
Motors.
GMs announcement underscores the utter failure of the
United Auto Workers and the rest of the official unions. The crisis
facing the working class, and the increasingly ruthless attacks
by big business, cannot be answered through bureaucratic organizations
that uphold the profit system, are based on a nationalist perspective,
and oppose an independent political movement of the working class.
Auto workers must be united and mobilized on an international
scale to fight the assault on jobs, wages and working conditions
which is being mounted by transnational corporations that scour
the globe for the cheapest possible labor. This is above all a
political struggle. It requires the building of a party of the
working class, completely independent of the Democratic and Republican
parties, that fights for a socialist program, including the nationalization
of the auto companies and their transformation into publicly-owned
and democratically controlled enterprises. The satisfaction of
human and social needs, not the accumulation of personal wealth,
must become the driving principle of economic life.
See Also:
Delphi demands US auto workers accept
poverty wages
[1 November 2005]
UAW-GM deal: a new stage in
the corporate assault on American workers
[24 October 2005]
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