General
Motors today unveiled an unusually frank advertisement acknowledging it had
"disappointed" and sometimes even "betrayed" American consumers as it lobbies to
clinch the federal aid it needs to stay afloat into next month. The print
advertisement marked a sharp break from GM's public stance of just several weeks
ago when it sought to justify its bid for a U.S. government on the grounds that
the credit crisis had undermined its business in ways executives could never
have foreseen. It also came as CEO Rick Wagoner, who has led the automaker since
2000, faces new pressure to step aside as GM seeks up to $18 billion in federal
funding.
The following is being issued by Automotive News: If Congress thinks a
bailout of General Motors is expensive, it should consider the cost of a GM
failure. Let's be clear. The alternative to government cash for GM is not a
dreamy Chapter 11 filing, a reorganization that puts dealers and the UAW in
their place, ensuring future success. No, even if GM could get
debtor-in-possession financing to keep the lights on (which it can't), Chapter
11 means a collapse of sales and a spiral into a Chapter 7 liquidation. GM's
100,000 American jobs will die. Health care for a million Americans will be lost
or at risk. Hundreds of GM's 1,300 suppliers will die. Their collapse could take
down Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler LLC, perhaps even North American transplants.
Dealers in every county of America will close. The government will face greater
unemployment, more Americans without health insurance and greater pension
liabilities.
Finally, Nobel economics prize winner
Paul Krugman said Sunday that the beleaguered U.S. auto industry will likely disappear. "It will do so because of the geographical forces that me and my colleagues have discussed," the Princeton University professor and New York Times columnist told reporters in Stockholm. "It is no longer sustained by the current economy."