General Motors is getting close to
going bankrupt and to being liquidated.
Ineptitude and greed of its management, its board, and its union are
finally catching up with the former king of the automotive industry.
In liquidation, foreign companies will
buy several of its most modern plants. Any
assets will be bought for cents on the dollar.
Most of its work force of white and blue collar workers will become
unemployed. The ripple effect on
suppliers, vendors, and customers will be ruinous. Liquidation will degenerate into a national
depression.
Management has tried repeatedly to save
this legendary company but did not have the vision, the capabilities, and the financial
backup. The GM board has been the major cause
for the slow death of this company. In
the face of continuing losses, the board insisted on healthy quarterly dividends. Not making enough cash and paying out
dividends is stumbling towards the abyss.
Any sudden downturn in sales or in margins forces the company into
insolvency.
GM’s top management and its board made
one fatal miscalculation; they gambled that Congress will never let GM go out
of business. This gamble was not reckless. After all, US Congress had saved Chrysler a
few decades back. When the
For the last several decades, the automotive
industry has been under constant attack by competition, by its investors, and
by government. GM management was not
capable of fending them off. GM lost a
huge portion of its market share, investors looted its cash, and
The ill advised meddling of US
Government in matters of fuel efficiency and emissions has cost the automotive
industry dearly. Huge amounts of
research funds were spent in meeting marginally effective government regulations.
When Mr. Wagoner and his compatriots came
to claim their bailout package, they were admonished by Congress for flying to
After assigning blame, it is time to
look at possible solutions. Liquidating
General Motors will do huge harm at the most inopportune period in
Going through a bankruptcy proceeding is
one viable approach. Unquestionably,
bankruptcy is a tough way to go. GM’s
image will be blemished severely and future customers may be worried about car
warranties and used car values. Future
sales will certainly take a hit. Bankruptcy
is time consuming and will damage the company and the crippled
A better way is an offer by
Additionally, US Congress must consider
security and strategic aspects. Nobody
else can muster the legislative and financial wherewithal for creating a critically
needed, highly competitive, massive, new manufacturing entity. The wide range of existing products and
production facilities and huge, sunken, irretrievable investments must be
leveraged into creating a rejuvenated company that is lean, mean, and
efficient. This company must be managed
to rebuild stock value for a future recovery of government funds through sale
of government held equity.
Above all, the new GM needs an infusion
of capable management, cash, new products, and a board consisting of all new stakeholders
in the company. Complete requisite
sales, production, financial, and other management systems are in place and can
be used for commencing business immediately.
The company can become competitive quickly after a thorough cleansing of
undeserved preferences, outdated policies, and inefficient practices.
The
The
Saving GM will be good for the