The
automotive industry crisis of 2008–2009 was a
part of a global financial downturn. The crises affected European
and Asian automobile manufacturers, but it was primarily felt in
the American
automobile
manufacturing industry. The downturn also affected Canada by
virtue of the
Automotive Products Trade
Agreement.
The automotive industry was weakened by a substantial increase in
the prices of
automotive fuels
linked to the
2003-2008 energy
crisis which discouraged purchases of
sport utility vehicles (SUVs) and
pickup trucks which have low
fuel economy. The popularity and
relatively high profit margins of these vehicles had encouraged the
American "
Big
Three" automakers,
General
Motors,
Ford, and
Chrysler to make them their primary focus. With few
fuel-efficient models to offer to consumers, sales began to slide.
By 2008, the situation had turned critical as the
credit crunch placed pressure
on the prices of
raw materials.
Car companies from
Asia,
Europe,
North America,
and elsewhere have implemented creative marketing strategies to
entice reluctant consumers as most experienced double-digit
percentage declines in sales. Major manufacturers, including the
Big Three and
Toyota offered substantial
discounts across their lineups. The Big Three faced criticism for
their lineups, which were seen to be irresponsible in light of
rising fuel prices. North American consumers turned to
higher-quality and more fuel-efficient product of Japanese and
European automakers. However, many of the vehicles perceived to be
foreign were actually "transplants," foreign cars manufactured or
assembled in the United States, at lower cost than true
imports.
Asia
China
In 2008 the Chinese government reduced automotive taxes in order to
spur flagging sales. In January 2009, Chinese auto-manufacturer
Chery reported unprecedented
monthly sales. (See also
Automobile industry in
China.)
India
Citing
falling production numbers, the State Bank of India
reduced interest rates on automotive loans in
February 2009.
For the first few months of 2009,
Tata
Motors conducted a widespread marketing campaign heralding the
debut of the
Tata Nano. Billed as "the
people's car," the manufacturer hopes the low cost will encourage
customers to purchase the vehicle despite the ongoing credit
crisis.
Japan
With high gas prices and a weak US economy in the summer of 2008,
Toyota reported a double-digit decline in
sales for the month of June, similar to figures reported by the
Detroit Big
Three. For Toyota, these were attributed mainly to slow sales
of its
Tundra pickup, as well as
shortages of its fuel-efficient vehicles such as the
Prius,
Corolla
and
Yaris. In response, the company has
announced plans to idle its truck plants, while shifting production
at other facilities to manufacture in-demand vehicles. On December
22, 2008, Toyota declared that it expected the first time loss in
70 years in its core vehicle-making business. Loss of $1.7 billion,
in its group operating revenue, would be its first operating loss
since 1938 (Company was founded in 1937). Toyota saw its sales drop
33.9 percent and Honda Motor by 31.6 percent.
On 5 December 2008
Honda Motor
Company announced that it would be exiting
Formula One race with immediate effect due to
the 2008 economic crisis and are looking to sell the team. Honda
has predicted that there may be reductions among part-time and
contract staff. Upper management bonuses would also be reassessed
and directors in the company will take a 10 percent pay cut
effective January 2009.
Nissan, another leading Japanese car
manufacturer, announced that it also would be slashing production
and will reduce its output by 80,000 vehicles in the first few
months of 2009.
In December 2008,
Suzuki Motor
Corporation, Japan's second biggest car manufacturer, announced
that it will cut production in Japan by about 30,000 units due to
falling demand. The company is expected to face its first profit
drop in eight years for financial year ending in March 2009.
Reported in Bloomberg on Dec 23, 2008, that Mitsubishi Motors is to
widen production cuts on falling demand. The Japanese maker of
Outlander sport-utility vehicles, will scrap the night shifts at
two domestic factories as the deepening global recession saps auto
demand. The carmaker will halt the night shift at its Mizushima
plant, excluding the minicar line. Nighttime work at the Okazaki
factory will stop from Feb. 2. The cuts are part of Mitsubishi's
move to reduce planned output by 110,000 vehicles in the year
ending March because of tumbling sales in Japan, the U.S. and
Europe. Japan's vehicle sales may fall to the lowest in 31 years in
2009, according to the country's automobile manufacturers
association. Mitsubishi will also halt production of passenger cars
on every Friday next month at the Mizushima factory in western
Japan. The Okazaki plant in central Japan will close every Saturday
in January and for another five days.
Toyota recently announced on Dec 22, 2008, it expects to barely
break even this year and slashes profit forecasts amid sales slump.
The Japanese automaker, often held up with Honda as a success story
for the rest of the auto industry to follow, said it expects a slim
profit margin of US$555 million for the year ending in March 2009.
Toyota had originally been projecting a massive profit of $13.9
billion for that period. Their sales in the United States were down
34 per cent last month and were down 34 per cent in Europe as well.
They are expecting a loss which would be the equivalent of about $2
billion (CDN)." Toyota President Katsuaki Watanabe said the impact
on the company from the struggling global economy has been "faster,
wider and deeper than expected." "The change that has hit the world
economy is of a critical scale that comes once in a hundred years,"
Watanabe said, speaking in Nagoya.Facing its first loss in nearly
sixty years, Toyota is seeking loans from the Japanese
government.
On November 4, 2009, Toyota announced its immediate withdrawal from
Formula One, ending the
team's
involvement in the sport after eight seasons.
Russia
In December 2008,
protectionist
tariffs of 30% were announced on cars imported into Russia,
described by prime minister
Vladimir
Putin as vital to save jobs in the domestic auto industry. The
tariffs provoked protests across Russia.
Riot police broke up
protests in the city of Vladivostok
, which is the main port of entry for Japanese
cars.
South Korea
South Korean automakers have been generally much more profitable
than their US and Japanese counterparts, recording strong growth
even in depressed markets such as the United States. Despite a
global economic slowdown, Hyundai-Kia successfully managed to
overtake
Honda Motor in 2008 as the
world's 5th largest automaker, climbing eight rankings in less than
a decade.
Hyundai-Kia continued its rapid success in 2009, when only a year
after overtaking Honda, it surpassed
Ford
Motor as the world's 4th largest automaker. Hyundai-Kia's
continued success was unusual at a time when most automakers saw
their sales falling sharply, with leading automaker
GM even filing for bankruptcy. Hyundai-Kia
took significant advantage of the prolonged automotive crisis by
producing affordable yet high quality and well designed vehicles.
Rapid
globalization has seen state of the art factories being built in
several countries including Slovakia
, the
United
States
and China
. The
manufacturing facilities have been geared-up to build products that
are designed and engineered for local markets.
The Kia cee'd is a leading example, being designed,
developed and engineered in Germany
and built in
Slovakia.
Unlike others, this crisis turned into an opportunity for many
South Korean automakers. Korean automaker
Hyundai offered customers who have
lost their jobs to return a new-car purchase for a refund. The
continued growth and success is attributable to the country's
fuel-efficient and well-equipped, yet affordable cars with generous
warranties, such as the
Kia Picanto,
Kia cee'd and
Hyundai i30, which attracted global consumers at
a time of severe economic recession, rapidly rising oil prices and
increasing environmental concerns. South Korean automakers had
terefore a competitive advantage against expensive luxury vehicles
and SUVs from US, Japanese and German automakers.
During the fourth quarter of 2008 to the first quarter of 2009,
which was the height of this automotive crisis, the extremely weak
won, especially against the
US dollar and
Japanese yen, significantly boosted the price
competitiveness of South Korean exports in key markets. Another
factor that helped maintain this momentum was an increasingly
improving brand awareness, attributable to the introduction of the
country's own luxury vehicles such as the
Hyundai Genesis and
Hyundai Genesis Coupe, which received
highly positive awards in the press and reviews.
Hyundai's brand grew
by 9% in 2008, surpassing Porsche and
Ferrari
, while it used the Super
Bowl football broadcast, the world's most expensive commercial
air time, to promote the Hyundai brand in the United
States.
Nonetheless, South Korean automakers were not completely immune to
this automotive crisis and in December 2008
Hyundai Motor Company had begun
reducing production at plants in the U.S., China, Slovakia, India
and Turkey because of sluggish demand. The company missed an
earlier projection of 4.8 million units for 2008 and announced a
freeze of wages for administrative workers and shortened factory
operations as demand weakens amid a global financial crisis.
South Korea's fourth largest automaker,
SsangYong Motor, owned by the
Chinese automobile manufacturer SAIC (
Shanghai Automotive
Industry Corporation), is the worst affected company in this
crisis as it manufactures mainly heavy petroleum consuming
SUVs. The carmaker recorded its fourth straight
quarterly losses by the end of 2008 with red ink of $20.8 million
in the third quarter. Also during the July to September period,
sales dropped 63 percent to 3,835 vehicles. Its production lines
have been idle since Dec. 17 as part of efforts to reduce its
inventory. The automaker has halted production twice previously
this year. In December 2008, SAIC gave an ultimatum to the
SsangYong union to accept its restructuring plan or face the parent
company's withdrawal, which, if implemented, would mean certain
bankruptcy.
However, the South Korean Ministry of Knowledge Economy said that
there will be no liquidity provision at the government level for
five automakers - Hyundai, Kia, GM Daewoo,
Samsung Renault and Ssangyong."We
have no plans to inject liquidity into the carmakers,
a
ministry official said. "It has been repeatedly made
clear.
Europe
In
Europe where car sales had also drastically
decreased, consideration was being given to financial support for
the automotive industry, particularly in France
, Germany
and Italy
.
German Foreign Minister
Frank-Walter Steinmeier and
Jean-Claude Juncker, Luxembourg's Prime
Minister and head of the Eurogroup of single currency nations,
discussed the possibility of a common rescue package to be agreed
by all the
EU member states.
France
On November 20, 2008, French automobile manufacturer
PSA Peugeot Citroen predicted sales
volumes would fall by at least 10% in 2009, following a 17% drop in
the current quarter. As a result, it planned to cut 2,700 jobs. On
the 11 February 2009, PSA announced it would cut 11,000 jobs world
wide, however none of these are expected to be in France.
Renault announced a net profit for 2008 of
599 million euros for the 2008 financial year. This was a 78% drop
in profits from the 2007 financial year. European sales fell 4% and
world wide sales 7%, forcing Renault to abandon their 2009 growth
targets. This however made Renault one of the few car makers to
return a profit. Renault consistently struggled to return profits
in the 1990s.
France/Germany
On November 24,
French President Nicolas
Sarkozy and
German Chancellor Angela
Merkel agreed to support the crisis-stricken automobile
industry in France and Germany. Detailed plans would be announced
shortly.
Italy
On
December 16, 2008 Fiat
in Italy
announced
that it will extend its temporary plant closures in Italy by a
month; the Pomigliano d'Arco, the main plant for its Alfa Romeo cars will be shut for four
weeks. However, on February 20, 2009, reacting to actions by
the Italian government to stimulate the automotive sector, Fiat
said its plant closures would be curtailed. The company also
forecast that sales in Europe will drop by 14 percent in
2009.
On January 20, 2009 the company announced that it had entered into
an agreement, subject to regulatory approvals, to acquire 35% of
Chrysler. Fiat's 35% stake in Chrysler would not involve a
conventional sale of shares, but would be achieved in return for
allowing Chrysler to utilise some of Fiat's fuel efficient
technologies (Chrysler's February submission to the US government
included a commitment to produce nine Fiat-derived vehicles over a
four-year period starting in 2010, including four hybrid-electric
and battery-electric models). Chrysler would be accorded access to
Fiat's sales outlets in Europe, while in reciprocation Fiat will
also gain access to Chrysler's dealership network in the US, where
it is predicted smaller models such as the
Fiat Grande Punto may be successful.
In the
past, Fiat has had trouble gaining a foothold in the American
markets, whilst Chrysler has never held a strong market share in
Europe since it sold its UK based Rootes
Group and France
based
Simca to PSA
Peugeot Citroen in the 1980s.
On January 22, 2009, Fiat announced a 19% drop in revenues in the
last three months of 2008. Italian Prime Minister
Silvio Berlusconi said the government
would meet to discuss the issue.
Spain
Spanish
automobile manufacturer SEAT (a subsidiary of
the Volkswagen Group) cut
production at its Martorell
plant by 5% on the 7 October 2008, due to a fall in
general sales. This affected 750 employees. This is expected
to continue until July 2009.
SEAT is still continuing to install solar
panals in its Martorell plant near Barcelona
.
Sweden
On December 11, the
Swedish
government provided its troubled auto makers,
Volvo and
Saab,
with support amounting to
SEK 28 billion ($3.5
billion). The two companies had requested assistance, faced with
the financial difficulties of their U.S. owners Ford and General
Motors. The plan consists of a maximum of SEK 20 billion in credit
guarantees, and up to SEK 5 billion in rescue loans. On the 18
February 2009 General Motors warned
Saab may
fail within ten days, should the Swedish government not intervene.
On 20 February, an administrator was appointed to restructure Saab
and assist in it becoming independent of its troubled parent
General Motors. General Motors have confirmed their intention to
sell their Swedish subsidiary, Saab. Of Sweden's 9 million
population, 140,000 work in the car industry and they account for
15% of exports.
United Kingdom
In the U.K.,
Jaguar Land Rover,
now owned by
Tata Motors, was seeking a
$1.5 billion loan from the government to cope with the credit
crisis.
On December 22, 2008,
Tata motors
declared that it would inject "tens of millions" of pounds for
Jaguar Land Rover company it had acquired from
Ford Motor Corporation in early 2008.
British Prime Minister
Gordon Brown
also stated the intention to help out car industry in U.K.
On the 8
January 2009, Nissan
Motors UK
announced it was to shed 1200 jobs from its
Washington
factory near Sunderland
in North East
England due to the automotive industry crisis of 2008.
This announcement was made, despite the plant recently being hailed
as the most efficient in Europe.
General
Motors UK subsidiary Vauxhall
Motors, whose brand is the second most popular in the UK has
two bases in the UK, a factory in Ellesmere Port
, Cheshire
and their headquarters and design and development
centre in Luton
, Bedfordshire. It is as yet unknown
whether these plants will be affected by the GM cutbacks.
The group
along with their sister subsidiary, Opel of
Germany
was supposed
to be sold in their majority to Magna International, a Austro
-Canadian
company who supply many parts to large car
companies, but General Motors cancelled the
transaction.
UK bus
manufacturer Optare received an order from
Arriva in November 2008 for the manufacture
of 53 buses in a contract worth over £6million, securing 500 jobs
at the companies Assembly factory in Cross Gates
, Leeds
, West Yorkshire and the parts centre in
Cumbernauld
, North
Lanarkshire.
UK Van and commercial vehicle manufacturer
LDV asked the UK government for a £30
million bridging loan to facilitate a management buyout of the
group. On the same day this was refused. LDV has since said it has
a viable future and intends to become the first volume producer of
electric vans should the management buyout take place.
Production at LDV's
factory in Birmingham
, West
Midlands (where it employs 850 staff) has been suspended since
December 2008 due to falling
demand. Eventually, no buyout materialised and the LDV was
declared defunct on 15th October 2009
North America
Canada
The Canadian auto industry is closely linked to the U.S., due to
the
Automotive
Products Trade Agreement and later the
North American Free Trade
Agreement (NAFTA), and is in similar trouble. Canada's 3,500
car dealers, which employ 140,000 people, told the federal and
Ontario governments in mid-November they are at risk from the
financial crisis; they are asking the national government to help
out despite a record year of sales. Ottawa is considering providing
financial aid to the Canadian subsidiaries of the Big Three, and
possibly auto parts companies as well. The auto industry argued
that loan guarantees and other help would try to save tens of
thousands of Canadian jobs threatened by the sudden drop in North
American car sales. Chrysler Canada has asked for $1 billion in
aid, making it the only Canadian arm of the Big Three to make a
specific dollar request.
Industry analyst Anthony Faria has criticized the labor contracts
that
Canadian Auto Workers
then-president
Buzz Hargrove
negotiated with the
Big Three US automobile
manufacturers in 2007, predicting that the
subprime mortgage crisis and
currency would hit Canadian auto production especially hard. Faria
noted that
UAW president
Ron Gettelfinger agreed to have the UAW's
"all-in" wage, benefit and pension costs drop from a high of $75.86
per hour in 2007 to an average of about $51 per hour starting in
2010. By comparison, the CAW's cost per hour was $77 in 2007 and
will rise to over $80 per hour by the end of the new contract.
Faria said that Gettelfinger went into negotiations "with the right
intention...Save jobs. The CAW strategy was to squeeze every dime
out of them." Hargrove was said to have "instilled backbone and an
attitude that the union could always make the auto makers buckle at
the bargaining table".
Current union president
Ken Lewenza has
argued that labor is not responsible for the bankruptcy crisis
facing the Big Three automakers, saying that his members would not
make concessions part of any taxpayer-funded bailout. "We don't see
this as us being the problem", Lewenza said, adding he would
"absolutely not" accept any further cuts after losing tens of
thousands of jobs in recent years. "We've suffered our share of
pain."Lawenza argued that the CAW agreed in 2007 to make
concessions that will save the Big Three $900 million over three
years.
A spokesman for the
Canadian Taxpayers Federation
has criticized the CAW's "no-concession" stance, saying that it
only serves to strengthen the opposition to a taxpayer-funded
bailout for the struggling Detroit Three automakers. The CTF
further pointed out that "It is especially difficult to understand
anyone asking for government help that refuses to do anything to
help itself to begin with", since they "fail to realize they've
existed at the substantial largesse of taxpayers for decades".
Kelly McParland, a columnist for the
National Post, has suggested that "if he won't
give anything, he and his members are likely to lose everything."
He also said that the problem facing the North American auto
industry was borne equally by management and labor alike,
criticizing labor for building up pay and benefits for themselves
that was as unsustainable as it was enviable, while attacking
management for its short-term strategy of selling gas-guzzling
trucks and sales tactics (price cuts, rebates, free gas and
cash-back schemes).
The CTF has opposed the proposed $3.5 CAD billion bailout for
Canadian subsidiaries of the Big Three, saying that it was an
unfair financial burden on the average Canadian, as well as another
excuse for the Detroit automakers to postpone much needed change.
The CTF noted that federal and provincial governments spent
$782-million in the past five years on the Big Three, saying "These
have been a bottomless pit of requests for cash". Lewenza
disagreed, saying that the bailout should be seen by Canadians as a
loan that will be paid back when the country's economy is
prosperous again.
On
December 20, the government of Canada and the province of Ontario
offered $3.3 billion in loans to the auto
industry. Under the plan
GM
will receive $3 billion and
Chrysler will
receive the rest.
Ford only asked for a line of
credit but will not be participating in the bailout.
The CAW negotiated a cost-cutting deal with General Motors Canada
on March 8, 2009. The deal would extend the current contract for an
additional year to September 2012, and preserves the current
average assembly-worker base pay of about $34 an hour. It would
eliminate a $1,700 annual "special bonus," and reduce special paid
absences or "SPA days" from two weeks to one week a year, while
maintaining vacation entitlements which range up to six weeks a
year for high-seniority workers. The deal also introduce payments
by members toward their health benefits - $30 monthly per family
for workers and $15 a month for pensioners. Lewenza said it also
would trim by 35 per cent company contributions to union-provided
programs such as child care and wellness programs. Lewenza called
the package a "major sacrifice." However, observers noted that the
deal did not go far enough; DBRS analyst Kam Hon described it as
"not material." Automotive industry consultant
Dennis DesRosiers said that General Motors
had missed the chance to slash labour costs, pointing out that
bankruptcy was a looming threat, Ottawa and Queen's Park demanded
cuts to the labour bill as a condition of the bailout, and that the
deficit to the pension fund would prevent the CAW from striking. He
estimated the total hourly cost of a GM Canada worker, including
benefits, is $75 to $78, and saying that "they [GM] got six or
seven" when it should have been cut by $20. DesRosiers also said
giving up cost-of-living increases is not significant when
inflation is nearly non-existent and added that the 40-hour
reduction in paid time off merely means "five fewer spa days."
University
of Toronto
professor Joe D'Cruz calculated that it would save
$148 million a year, though GM is seeking $6 billion in Canadian
government support.
CAW autoworkers with seniority were able to maintain 10 weeks of vacation with full pay, while not contributing to their pension fund, relying instead on taxpayers (including these without pensions) to help make up their unfunded liabilities.
The agreement is contingent on Canada being allocated 20% of GM's
North American, and getting billions of dollars in federal and
provincial taxpayer support, which Lewenza stressed will be loans.
However, some suggested that this would not be the final time that
automakers would request a bailout.Dennis DesRosiers estimated that
GM will go through its government loans in a couple of quarters,
long before any recovery in the market. Furthermore, GM Canada
president Arturo Elias had admitted to MP
Frank Valeriote that GM had pledged all its
assets worldwide to the U.S. government in order to secure the
first tranche of a US$30-billion loan, leaving no assets to
collateralize the $6-billion loan from the Canadian government. The
Canadian Taxpayers' Federation noted that between 1982 and 2005,
Ottawa handed out over $18.2-billion to corporations, of which only
$7.1-billon was repayable, and only $1.3-billion was ever
repaid.
Chrysler vice-chairman and president
Thomas W. LaSorda (himself the son of a CAW
official) and Ford's chief of manufacturing Joe Hinrichs said that
the GM-CAW deal was insufficient, suggesting that they would break
the CAW's negotiating pattern set by GM. LaSorda told the
Canadian House of Commons finance
committee that he would demand an hourly wage cut of $20, suggested
that Chrysler may withdraw from Canada if it fails to achieve more
substantial cost savings from the CAW.
On March 31, 2009, the Canadian federal and Ontario governments
jointly rejected the restructuring plans submitted by GM and
Chrysler. This came a day after US President
Barack Obama had rejected the plans of their
parent companies. Both federal Industry Minister
Tony Clement and Ontario Premier
Dalton McGuinty suggested the CAW's initial
deal was insufficient in cutting costs and the union had return to
the bargaining table to make further concessions, in order to show
that taxpayers' money is justified.
As well, Fiat
CEO Sergio Marchionne has asked that the CAW's wages be reduced to the levels of non-unionized workers from Honda and Toyota operating in Canada, or else they would walk away from the proposed alliance with Chrysler, resulting in the latter being forced into bankruptcy.
United States
The crisis in the United States is mainly defined by the government
bailouts of both
General Motors and
Chrysler, while
Ford secured a
line of credit in case they require a bridging loan in the near
future. Car sales declined in the United States, affecting both US
based and foreign car manufacturers. The bridging loans lead to
greater scrutiny of the US automotive industry in addition to
criticism of their product range, product quality, high labour
wages, job bank programs, and healthcare and retirement
benefits.
In the United States under Chapter 11, if a company declares
bankruptcy then they can go to a bankruptcy judge who will then
decide what is in that company's best interest. The judge will look
at all of the company's different aspects and from that they will
create a leaner and stronger company. GM, Chrysler, and Ford are
all in trouble because they have not correctly managed their
company's products, time, and money. With the bailout plan
President Obama and his administration currently have available it
will ensure that there is restructuring of the companies. They have
planned for GM to be funded for 60 days during which they must come
up with a sturdy plan for restructuring and the CEO also must
resign. The plan that has been established for Chrysler is that
they have 30 days to partner with Italian automaker, Fiat, and then
they will receive $6 billion in loans.
While the "
Big
Three" U.S. market share declined from 70% in 1998 to 53% in
2008, global volume increased particularly in Asia and Europe. The
U.S. auto industry was profitable in every year since 1955, except
those years following U.S. recessions and involvement in wars. U.S.
auto industry profits suffered from 1971-73 during the
Vietnam War, during the recession in the late
1970s which impacted auto industry profits from 1981-83, during and
after the Gulf War when industry profits declined from 1991-93, and
during the Iraq War from 2001-03 and 2006-09. During these periods
the companies incurred much legacy debt.
Facing financial losses, the Big Three have idled many factories
and drastically reduced employment levels. GM spun off many of its
employees in certain divisions into independent companies,
including
American Axle in 1994 and
Delphi in 1999. Ford spun off
Visteon in 2000.
The spin-offs and
other parts makers have shared Detroit
's downturns, as have the U.S.-owned plants in
Canada. Altogether the parts makers employ 416,000 people in
the U.S. and Canada. General Motors alone is estimated to have lost
$51 billion in the three years before the 2008 financial crisis
began. GM is set to reacquire factories from its Delphi subsidiary
during its Chapter 11 restructing.
The 2005 Harbour Report estimated that Toyota's lead in benefits
cost advantage amounted to $350 US to $500 US per vehicle over
North American manufacturers. The
United Auto Workers agreed to a two-tier
wage in recent 2007 negotiations, something which the
Canadian Auto Workers has so far
refused.
Jared Bernstein, the chief
economist of Vice President
Joe Biden,
noted in an interview with WWJ-AM in Detroit that most of the 2007
contract concessions apply only to new hires, while older workers
"still benefit from contracts that were signed a long time ago."
However, only 30% of parts used by the Big Three employ union
labor, with 70% sourced from non-union labor.
Delphi, which was spun off from
GM in 1999, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy after the UAW refused
to cut their wages and GM is expected to be liable for a $7 billion
shortfall.
In order
to improve profits, the Detroit
automakers made agreements with unions to reduce
wages while making pension and health care commitments. GM,
for instance, at one time picked up the entire cost of funding
health insurance premiums of its employees, their survivors and GM
retirees, as the US did not have a universal health care system.
With most of these plans chronically underfunded in the late 1990s,
the companies have tried to provide retirement packages to older
workers, and made agreements with the UAW to transfer pension
obligations to an independent trust. Nonetheless, non-unionized
Japanese automakers, with their younger American workforces (and
far fewer American retirees) will continue to enjoy a cost
advantage.
Despite the history of their
marques, many
long running cars have been discontinued or relegated to fleet
sales, as
GM,
Ford and
DaimlerChrysler
shifted away resources from midsize and compact cars to lead the
"SUV Craze". Since the late 1990s, over half of their profits have
come from
light trucks and
SUVs, while they often could not break even on compact cars
unless the buyer chose options. Ron Harbour, in releasing the
Oliver Wyman’s 2008 Harbour Report, stated that many small
“
econoboxes” of the past acted as loss
leaders, but were designed to bring customers to the brand in the
hopes they would stay loyal and move up to more profitable models.
The report estimated that an automaker needed to sell ten small
cars to make the same profit as one big vehicle, and that they had
to produce small and mid-size cars profitably to succeed, something
that the Detroit three have not yet done. SUV sales peaked in 1999
but have not returned to that level ever since, due to higher gas
prices.
In the case of
Chrysler
Corporation, compact and mid-sized vehicles such as the
Dodge Neon,
Dodge Stratus and
Chrysler Cirrus were produced profitably
during the 1990s concurrently with more profitable larger vehicles.
However, following the
DaimlerChrysler merger in 1998, there was a
major cost-cutting operation at the company. The result was the
lowering of benchmarked standards for Chrysler to aim at. This
directly led to the following in Chrysler's case. There was
realignment of the Chrysler Group model range with those of GM and
Ford (ie. a skew towards larger vehicles).
The Detroit Big Three had been slower to bring new vehicles to the
market compared with foreign competitors. The Big Three have
battled initial quality perceptions in spite of reports showing
improvements.
Falling sales resulted in the Big Three's plants operating below
capacity. GM's plants were operating at 85% in November 2005, well
below the plants of its Asian competitors, and was only maintained
by relying on cash incentives and subsidized leases. Rebates,
employee pricing, and 0% financing boosted sales but drained the
automaker's cash reserves. The
subprime mortgage crisis and high
oil prices of 2008 caused the popularity of once best-selling
trucks and SUVs to plummet. Automakers were forced to continue
offering heavy incentives to help clear excess inventory. Due to
the declining residual value of their vehicles, Chrysler and GM
stopped offering leases on a most of their vehicles in 2008.
In September, 2008 the
Big Three asked for $50
billion to pay for health care expenses and avoid bankruptcy and
ensuing layoffs, and Congress worked out a 25$ billion loan. By
December, President Bush had agreed to an emergency bailout of
$17.4 billion to be distributed by the next administration in
January and February. In early 2009, the prospect of avoiding
bankruptcy by General Motors and Chrysler continued to wane as new
financial information about the scale of the 2008 losses came in.
Ultimately, the Obama administration forced Chrysler and General
Motors into bankruptcy. Chrysler filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy
protection on May 1, 2009 followed by General Motors a month
later.
On June 2, GM Motors announced the sale of the
Hummer brand of
off-road
vehicles to
Sichuan
Tengzhong Heavy Industrial Machinery Company Ltd., a machinery
company in western China, in which the transaction is expected to
close in the third quarter of 2009.
Effects of environmental expectations and changing product
demand
Environmental politics and related concerns regarding carbon
emissions have heightened sensitivity to gas mileage standards and
environmental protection worldwide. In a 2007 edition of his book
An Inconvenient
Truth,
Al Gore criticized the Big
Three. "They keep trying to sell large, inefficient gas-guzzlers
even though fewer and fewer people are buying them." For example,
Japan requires autos to achieve of gasoline and China requires .
The
European Union requires by 2012.
By comparison, U.S. autos are required to achieve only presently.
Other nations have adopted standards that are increasing mpg
requirements in the future.
When California
raised its own standards, the auto companies
sued.
The Big Three received funding for a $25 billion government loan
during October 2008 to help them re-tool their factories to meet
new fuel-efficiency standards of at least by 2020. The $25 billion
in loans from the Department of Energy to the auto manufacturers
were actually authorized by Congress early this year but not
funded. Automakers could use these loans to "equip or establish
facilities to produce ‘advanced technology vehicles’ that would
meet certain emissions and fuel economy standards; component
suppliers could borrow funds to retool or build facilities to
produce parts for such vehicles."
Effect of 2008 oil price shock and economic crisis
In 2008, a series of damaging blows drove the Big Three to the
verge of bankruptcy. Part of the cause was very high labor costs
(much higher than the foreign plants in the U.S.). The Big Three
had in recent years manufactured
SUVs and large
pickups, which were much more
profitable than smaller, fuel-efficient cars. Manufacturers made
15% to 20% profit margin on an SUV, compared to 3% or less on a
car. When gasoline prices rose above $4 per gallon in 2008,
Americans stopped buying the big vehicles and Big Three sales and
profitability plummeted.
Robert
Samuelson has advocated a more consistent energy policy,
arguing "wild swings between low and high fuel prices have crippled
the U.S. industry by erratically shifting buyer preferences -- to
and from SUVs."
The
financial crisis played
a role, as GM was unable to obtain credit to buy Chrysler. Sales
fell further as
consumer credit
tightened and it became much harder for people with average or poor
credit to obtain a bank loan to buy a car. During 2007, nearly 2
million new U.S. cars were purchased with funds from home equity
loans. Such funding was considerably less available in 2008. In
addition, stock prices fell as shareholders worried about
bankruptcy; GM's shares fell below 1946 levels. Furthermore, the
instability of the job market and individual consumers' finances
discourages consumers who already have a working vehicle from
taking on a new loan and payments, which affected almost all major
manufacturers.
The annual capacity of the industry is 17 million cars; sales in
2008 dropped to an annual rate of only 10 million vehicles made in
the U.S. and Canada. All the automakers and their vast supplier
network account for 2.3% of the U.S. economic output, down from
3.1% in 2006 and as much as 5% in the 1990s. Some 20% of the entire
national manufacturing sector is still tied to the automobile
industry. The transplants can make a profit when sales are at least
12 million; the Big Three when sales are at least 15 million.
The crisis has affected auto companies around the world, with large
sales decreases experienced by all.
As of December 19, 2008, oil prices had fallen to $33.87 per
barrel, but the automobile crisis continues.
See also
References
- Uncertainty in U.S. auto industry puts pressure on
suppliers. International Herald Tribune. September 19, 2008.
Retrieved 20 November 2008.
- Gas prices put Detroit Big Three in crisis mode.
Associated Press June 1, 2008. Retrieved 20 November 2008.
- Hazardous Conditions for the Auto Industry. New
York Times, October 1, 2008. Retrieved 20 November 2008.
- What's to Be Done about the Auto Industry? by Dan
La Boz, Monthly Review, November 2008.
- Toyota sputters as market shifts
- Toyota Cuts Back on Trucks - TIME
- Loyalty to Detroit 3 slipping away | Freep.com |
Detroit Free Press
- NY Times Advertisement
- Hyundai-Kia overtakes Ford to become the fourth
biggest carmaker | Hyundai Car News - sgCarMart
- Hyundai-Kia overtakes Ford to become world's 4th
largest automaker — Autoblog
- Interbrand | Best Global Brands List |
2009
- Germany's Steinmeier Calls for EU to Rescue Ailing
Car Industry. Deutsche Welle. Retrieved 19 November 2008.
- Peugeot Citroen cuts 2,700 jobs. BBC News. 20
November 2008.
- France and Germany pledge auto aid. Associated
Press, November 24, 2008
- France to announce recovery plan for auto industry.
Associated Press, November 25, 2008
- SEATCupra.net - Your #1 source for SEAT information
- SEAT adjusts production at Martorell plant
- Swedish car firms get bail-out. BBC News, 11
December 2008.
- Car firm in talks with government. BBC
News. November 23, 2008.
- [1]
- "Car dealers plead for government help," The Canadian Press Nov. 21, 2008
online; "Labour rates not a problem in auto industry: Lewenza,"
Canadian Press, Nov. 20, 2008
- Fortune - Detroit's Downfall
- Fortune 500.CNN Money.
- Fortune - What's Ahead for GM?
- [2], MSN Money.
- [3], New York Times. December 19, 2008.
- [4] New York Times. May 1, 2009.
- [5] MSNBC. June 1, 2009.
- Who bought Hummer? Sichuan Tengzhong of China -
Jun. 2, 2009
- Chinese company to buy Hummer from GM - Autos-
msnbc.com
-
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/03/business/03auto.html?_r=1&hp
- An
Inconvenient Truth - Online
- Consumer Reports - $25 billion for Auto
Industry
- Time-Why the SUV Is All the Rage
- NYT Samuelson - How to Bail Out GM
- NYT-Auto Industry Feels Pain of Tight Credit
- Louis Uchitelle, "If Detroit Falls, Foreign Makers Could Be
Buffer," New York Times, Nov. 16. 2008
- Ecuador’s Correa Says He’ll Maintain U.S.
Dollar, Bloomberg, December 20, 2008.
External links