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The Cerberus-Chrysler deal: The case for public ownership
of the auto industry
Statement of the World Socialist Web Site editorial
board
30 May 2007
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With the sale of Chrysler Corporation to the private equity
firm Cerberus Capital Management, the most powerful Wall Street
financial interests are in position to press ahead with their
plans for a radical restructuring and downsizing of the North
American auto industry. The buyoutthe first by a private
equity firm of a major auto producerthreatens the jobs and
livelihoods of Chryslers 80,000 workers in the US and Canada
and sets a precedent for an intensified attack on all autoworkers.
The Cerberus takeover marks a new stage in the decades-long
assault on the jobs and living standards of auto workers and industrial
workers as a whole. It is the product not simply of the subjective
greed of corporate executives and speculators, but of the crisis
and failure of the capitalist system itself. Ever more brutally,
the living standards of working people all over the world are
being sacrificed to maintain a parasitic and socially destructive
system that subordinates all social needs to the further enrichment
of a financial elite.
The global character of the attack on auto workers demonstrates
that it is the expression of a systemic crisis in the auto industry
and the profit system as a whole. Auto plants are being closed,
jobs destroyed and wages slashed in Germany, France, Spain, Brazil
and other countries, as production is shifted to cheap-labor havens
around the world.
Often called a vulture fund, Cerberus has a record
of taking over troubled companies, including airlines, textile
mills, telecommunications firms, supermarket chains and auto parts
makers, drastically slashing labor costs, and then reselling all
or part of the businesses at an enormous markup. With other private
equity firms eyeing General Motors and Ford, Chrysler will be
a test case for a new wave of plant closures combined with unprecedented
wage cuts and the gutting of healthcare and pension benefits for
retired workers and their families.
Only days after the sale of Chrysler to Cerberus was announced,
Chrysler CEO Tom LaSorda said the new Chrysler Holding Company
would seek to slash $300 million from retiree medical benefits,
imposing out-of-pocket expenses on retirees and their dependents
for the first time in 40 years.
The purpose of this cost-cutting is to boost the rate of return
for big investors who have long considered the auto industry an
unattractive investment. At present, the world auto industry averages
a 5 percent return for investors, with many companies, especially
the US manufacturers, losing money. Cerberus averages a 22 percent
rate of return. It is impossible to achieve such a return on investment
through the normal business of building and selling cars. It can
be achieved only by carving up the industry and driving up the
rate of exploitation of workers to levels not seen since the 1920s.
One possible scenario was outlined in Newsweek magazine
May 17, which wrote, Rather than each Detroit
automaker building every kind of car and truckand losing
their shirt on most of themthey could be design and brand
houses that build only the things that make them money.... Why
not focus on designing a car, marketing it and selling it, rather
than manufacturing it? This might be heresy in the Motor City,
but its commonplace in other industries.
Such a plan would entail the shutdown of much of what remains
of the US auto industry and the outsourcing of production to low-wage
contractors and subcontractors in the US and around the world.
The near-collapse of the US auto companies expresses in concentrated
form the anarchic and irrational character of the capitalist system.
The increasing globalization of production, fueled by major advances
in technology and science, has heightened the fundamental contradictions
of the profit system: between world economy and the nation-state
system to which capitalism is wedded, and between socialized production
and private ownership of the means of production.
While technological advances and the addition of new auto-producing
countries, such as China, India and Brazil, have sharply increased
output, the traditional markets in North America, Western Europe
and Japanwhere 70 percent of the worlds vehicles are
soldare already saturated. The majority of inhabitants in
the rest of the worldwhere six out of seven people on the
planet liveare too poor to own a car.
Auto industry analysts and Wall Street investors are demanding
a drastic reduction in global automaking capacity, on the order
of a one-third cutback in the current annual output of 66 million
vehicles. The entire auto industry in North America could be shut
down and the global industry would still, in their eyes, have
excess capacity.
Auto unions betrayal
The support given to the buyout by the United Auto Workers
(UAW) and the Canadian Auto Workers (CAW) unions is a historic
betrayal of the working class. Even before DaimlerChrysler officially
announced the sell-off of Chrysler at a press conference on May
14, the UAW issued a statement endorsing the deal, saying it was
in the best interests of our UAW members, the Chrysler Group
and Daimler.
There is every indication that the UAW was given assurances
by the new owners that the perks and privileges of the labor bureaucracy
would be protected and even enhanced. The Wall Street Journal
reported May 15 that Chrysler and the other Big
Three automakers are considering a plan to turn over the companies
multibillion-dollar retiree healthcare funds to the union, making
the UAW one of the largest private-sector providers of healthcare
in the US. Such an arrangement would provide the union bureaucrats
with a massive stream of income, while giving the auto companies
a chance to dump their under-funded liabilities and leave it up
to the union to cut medical coverage for 1 million UAW retirees
and their dependents.
To oppose these attacks, North American autoworkers must consider
the root causes of both the auto companies attacks and the
treachery of the unions. There is a need for militant actionorganized
independently of the UAW and CAWincluding strikes, mass
demonstrations and other forms of solidarity from all sections
of the working class, both in the US and internationally. But
such action cannot succeed unless it is connected to a new political
strategyone that proceeds from a recognition of the historical
failure of the profit system and the need to build a mass socialist
movement of the working class in opposition to all of the parties
of big business. In the US, this means a clean and irrevocable
break with the Democratic Party.
Lessons of a history of struggle
The transformation of the UAW into an appendage of corporate
management, with ambitions to become an outright capitalist enterprise,
provides a definitive historical verdict on the conception that
working people can defend their interests through organizations
that accept and defend the profit system.
Although socialist and left-wing workers played the crucial
role in the mass movement that established the industrial unions,
including the UAW, in the 1930s, from the time of its inception,
the leaders of the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO)
explicitly defended the capitalist system and excluded any far-reaching
demands that challenged the property rights and decision-making
monopoly of the capitalist owners. This defense of the profit
system was politically maintained through the union bureaucracys
opposition to the development of an independent party of labor
and its alliance with the Democrats.
After World War II, UAW President Walter Reuther spearheaded
an anticommunist witch-hunt to purge the unions of socialist influence.
The marginalization of socialists fatally undermined the unions,
although its full implications were masked for a time by the temporary
and extraordinary conditions of the postwar economic boom.
The subordination to the Democratic Party was based on the
fiction that it was possible to reconcile the interests of the
working class with those of the capitalist ruling elite. The UAW
entered into a devils bargain with the auto monopolies:
In exchange for the unions guarantee of labor discipline
and the exclusion of any challenge to the basic prerogatives of
corporate management, the companies would provide auto workers
with regular wage increases, long-term employment and other benefits.
In essence, Reuther tied the future of the working class to the
hope that US capitalism and the US-based auto companies would
maintain a hegemonic position on world markets forever.
By the 1970s the postwar boom was unraveling and a growing
world crisis was centered in the decline in the global economic
position of the United States. The response of Americas
corporate and political elite to the mounting challenge from Japan
and Europe was to embark on an offensive against the working class.
The Chrysler bailout
The Chrysler bailout of 1979-80 was a major turning point.
The auto bosses and the Democratic administration of Jimmy Carter
used the threatened shutdown of the near-bankrupt company to extract
sweeping concessions from autoworkers. The UAW joined with the
government and Chrysler in imposing massive job cuts and wage
concessions against the bitter resistance of rank-and-file workers.
In return, UAW President Douglas Fraser was given a seat on Chryslers
board of directors.
The Chrysler bailout set the stage for the violent union-busting
and wage-cutting of the 1980s and 1990s, beginning with Reagans
smashing of the PATCO air traffic controllers strike in
1981. Rather than defending the hard-won gains of its members,
the UAW and the AFL-CIO offered their services to crush rank-and-file
resistance and impose the demands of the corporate bosses. The
union bureaucracy claimed that the class struggle had been superseded
by a new struggle to defend corporate America against its foreign
competitors. A new labor-management partnership was needed, the
UAW claimed, to save American jobs. Corporate bosses
like Chrysler Chairman Lee Iacocca were presented as workers
saviors, while the UAW organized racist campaigns against Japanese
imports.
The UAWs chief negotiator with Chrysler, Marc Stepp,
summed up the position of the entire labor bureaucracy by declaring,
We have free enterprise in this country. The corporations
have a right to make a profit. On this basis the UAW supported
the shutdown of dozens of plants, the elimination of 50,000 jobs
and the imposition of $500 million in wage cuts and other concessions.
The betrayal of the UAW was rooted in the nationalist perspective
to which it was, as an organization defending American capitalism,
wedded. The globalization of the auto industry undermined the
ability of nationally-based unions to extract concessions from
management by withholding or threatening to withhold labor. Under
conditions in which vehicles were produced increasingly for a
world market and production was organized on a global scale, the
auto companies were able to shift production from one country
or region to another. The role of the unions was transformed from
extracting concessions from the employers to extracting concessions
from their own members, in an attempt to convince US automakers
to keep production at home and thereby prop up the unions
membership rolls and dues base.
The pro-capitalist and nationalist polices of the UAW have
produced an unmitigated disaster for workers. By the end of this
year, there will be only 46,000 United Auto Workers members left
at Chrysler, down from 110,000 in 1979. All told, the number of
UAW members at the Big Three plants in the US will have fallen
by a staggering 76 percent since 1979from 750,000 to 177,000.
Entire citiessuch as Detroit and Flint, Michigan, which
once enjoyed the highest per capita incomes in the UShave
been reduced to industrial wastelands plagued by chronic unemployment,
cash-starved schools and record numbers of home foreclosures.
The Chrysler bailout also gave rise to the celebrity
CEO, who, along with corporate raiders and Wall Street speculators,
openly set out to reorganize industry in order to funnel vast
resources into their own pockets. Over the next quarter of century,
a vast redistribution of wealth took place from working people
to the richest 1 and 2 percent of the population. In the 1960s,
top executives of manufacturing companies made 25 to 40 times
the median pay of production workers. By 2006, CEOs were making
400 times the pay of their employees. The top 1 percent of the
population300,000 people averaging more than $1 million
in yearly incomereceived their largest share of the national
income since 1928, and collectively accounted for as much income
as the bottom 150 million Americans.
These huge fortunes were notas was the case with the
nineteenth century robber baronsassociated with the expansion
of mass industries. On the contrary, financial speculators and
top corporate executives were making vast sums by destroying the
productive forces. Summing up the ruling elites contempt
for production and for the working class, Ray Diallo, the founder
of the hedge fund Bridgewater Associates, who made $350 million
last year, said, The money thats made from manufacturing
stuff is a pittance in comparison to the amount of money made
from shuffling money around.
Transform the auto industry into a publicly-owned
enterprise
The mass industries can no longer be allowed to remain the
personal assets of Americas wealthy elite, who dispense
with them as they see fit. The first step to protect the interests
of working people is to institute democratic control over all
business decisions affecting work, safety, salaries, hiring and
hours. These decisions should be made not by the wealthy few,
but rather by committees of factory floor workers, technicians
and other experts committed to the interests of working people.
The establishment of industrial democracy requires the opening
of the books of all corporations for inspection by the workers,
and the ratification of corporate leadership by a democratic vote
of all employees.
If the auto industry is to be run for the good of society,
it must be transformed into a publicly owned enterprise and integrated
into a planned socialist economy. The global auto industry involves
the activity of millions of factory workers, engineers, designers,
scientists, accountants and other working people, and consumes
large portions of the worlds steel, rubber, glass and oil.
Such vast human and natural resources can be marshaled in a rational
and environmentally sustainable fashion only if the worlds
producers cooperate on the basis of a scientific plan to produce
safe, high-quality and affordable transportation.
The vast sums of capital that travel through the worlds
financial markets each day are the product of humanitys
labor. The vital decisions of where to invest societys financial
resources must be made democratically by the people, not behind
closed doors by speculators and other financial parasites. The
major banks and investment houses must be placed under public
ownership. At the same time, the tax cuts for the rich implemented
by the Bush administration must be repealed and taxes on those
earning over $300,000 drastically increased in order to fund social
programs and reduce taxes on working people.
Workers must reject the American chauvinism of the labor bureaucracy
and the Democratic Party, and unite with their class brothers
and sisters internationally against the global auto giants. Rank-and-file
committees should be set up independently of the UAW and CAW in
order to unite blue-collar and white-collar workers in the US
and Canada to fight against the dismantling of Chrysler, and stand
with workers throughout the industry to defend jobs and living
standards. Chrysler workers should prepare strike action, plant
occupations and mass demonstrations to link their struggle with
every section of the working class.
The policies outlined here are anathema to the Democratic Party,
which, like the Republicans, is a political party financed and
controlled by the financial aristocracy. Because the interests
of the working class cannot be reconciled with the profit system,
it is necessary for workers to break with this big business party
and build a mass socialist party of their own. Only in this way
can every struggleagainst job-cutting, militarism and war,
attacks on democratic rightsbe united in a single political
struggle to establish a workers government and create genuine
democracy and social equality.
We urge Chrysler workers and their supporters who are looking
for way to fight the onslaught on jobs, wages, pensions and health
benefits to contact the World Socialist Web Site and the
Socialist Equality Party and discuss this perspective.
See Also:
After the Chrysler saleCerberus
set to demand massive concessions
[21 May 2007]
The Cerberus takeover of Chryslerwhat
it means for auto workers
[17 May 2007]
A new business model emerges
Why the United Auto Workers supports Cerberus take-over
of Chrysler
[16 May 2006]
A historic betrayal of auto workers
United Auto Workers capitulates to carve-up of Chrysler
[15 May 2007]
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