Unfortunately this is nowhere near as simple as you would think from reading this thread.
You and I (meaning taxpayers) are going to pay for this no matter what happens. The question is what is the best use of our money.
People love to throw facts around out of context. The anti-union people love this 1,000 to 1500 of every GM car is union benefits! Nobody bothers to ask what that really means. The vast majority of it is defined benefit pensions and healthcare for retirees. If GM declares bankruptcy the defined benefit pensions will have to be paid by a Government agency, the PBGC. The PBGC does not have enough money to pay them so the government will have to bail it out, not much question there.
That is basically what Eastern Air lines did, the retirees still got a pretty good chunk of their pension, it's just that Eastern didn't have to pay it!
Obviously unemployement is going to go through the roof so we are certainly going to pay a TON there not just for GM employees but all the ancillary companies that are also going to face layoffs.
The other big problem is that they can't file a chapter 11 bankruptcy. Very few people are going to buy a car from a bankrupt automaker, pretty much both sides agree bankrtuptcy is the end.
Anyway you slice it a bunch of pro or anti union rhetoric or screaming about executive salaries may make you feel better but it's a smoke screen.
The big question now has to be what's the BEST use of the billions of dollars this is going to cost us no matter what happens. Can we save the auto industry and possibly end up getting some of the money back down the road or is it better to just cut our losses and get out.
Yes, but the PBGC hasn't paid nearly as well for other employees. Look at what the Delta pilots got.....about 30 cents on the dollar. The PBGC is already terribly underfunded, and that will only continue to get worse. We simply don't have the money to fund it. Wait til the imaginary Social Security and Medicare "trust funds" timeline runs out. That's when things will get really interesting. Twice in the last month our US Treasury has held auctions for 30 year Treasuries....and they haven't gone that well. Perhaps the rest of the world is starting to get a bit concerned about our federal debt?
I get the "chapter 11" dilemma with the Big Three, but how confident does anyone really feel about buying a GM car right now? Or even if they get 30 Billion from the government? What does that buy them....another year? I'll admit, I'm biased. I owned one GM vehicle....a chevy chevette....right out of high school. Bought it used with my own hard earned money and it was just a total piece of crap. And I'm being completely honest when I say that most people I know who own American cars have many more issues with them than we've ever had with our cars....all foreign cars. My Aunt had a Chevy Trailblazer.....a 2005.....it was really cheap inside, and she hated it....had nothing but problems with it.
But the real argument is not just "we need to save jobs!!" It's really whether GM and the big three are even worth saving. Forget about "return on investment" for the US taxpayer.....we'll never see that money again....ever. GM stated that they need 10 Billion just to have enough to pay their bills through the next year, and 15 Billion to help them *close plants*, get rid of "failing models" and buy-out employees! So we're losing jobs here no matter what.
And the big "winning scenario" is this....once they buy-out all of those employees as quoted from a Time article...
"The carrot for GM is that any new workers it hires in the U.S. will make $13 to $14 an hour and collect limited benefits rather than work for $29 an hour and get full benefits the old UAW wage."
So, yes, by all means, let's pay 50 Billion....minimum, to create a bunch of crappy jobs with limited benefits.
And let's all keep in mind, that GM *lost* 73 Billion dollars since 2004.....and now we're expecting them make enough to pay us back 50 Billion.
Again, the worst-case scenario is that we lose 2.5 million jobs...."poof", into the thin air. The reality is likely far different. All three won't fail....likely one will fail or get much, much smaller (which is what will happen regardless of what we do to help them). The other two will merge and get leaner and meaner (and hopefully smarter). The foreign auto makers will pick up market share...big deal....they've been doing that for years......and they'll likely open more plants in the US since we still seem to purchase a fair amount of autos. They'll also keep the suppliers and their employees busy. And so we'll still end up with a bunch of those $13-14 an hour jobs anyway.
I just can't see us pouring money into these companies that simply lose money hand over fist.