Industrial Policy Can Work - Rethinking the Auto Bailout

Note: this is a cross-post from The Realignment Project. Follow us on Facebook!

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How NOT to Do It

 

Introduction:

When the first generation of historians begin their work on the Obama Administration, one of the more puzzling chapters will be the winter of 2010, when a major sea-change occurred in public policy that neither the administration nor the media were particularly eager to spend that much time trumpeting - namely, the revival of industrial policy after forty years or more beyond the pale of the Conventional Wisdom, as demonstrated by the success of the American automotive industry rescue.

While we wait for that generation of historians to get started being born, we can at least begin to learn some lessons about how and why the Big Three rescue worked when other industry bailouts have been such miserable failures.

 

What Makes This Bailout Different From All Other Bailouts:

In the last three months, three things happened that many commentators had said would never happen: GM emerged from bankruptcy to an enormous initial public offering that saw its stock soar to $33 a share, up from $1 a share during the bankruptcy crisis of 2009, earning the U.S Treasury some $10 billion, all of the Big Three announced a return to profitability in the third quarter, and the Chevy Volt's stunning debut as the twice-awarded motor vehicle of the year marked the first U.S- and UAW-made electric car readied for mass production.

More importantly for American workers, the Big Three announced a series of investments in the Midwest, expanding factories, adding on shifts, and rebuilding some of the damage done by the Great Recession. Michigan alone will see a $2 billion investment, creating 2,250 new jobs in building hybrid cars, battery packs for the new electric Chevy Volt; Illinois will see a $600 million investment from Chrysler; Ford has announced that it will repatriate 2,000 union jobs from overseas.

And one further tid-bit that you won't see in the newspapers - because of GM"s IPO and the resurgence of the Big Three, the UAW's VEBA health care and pension fund is up $3 billion, and looking like it will hit the break-even point from where it would have been fully funded under the pre-bankruptcy agreements with management. So health care plans and retirement accounts are protected and the UAW now has the liquidity needed to begin organizing the non-union "runaway" and foreign auto plants that sprang up in the South. So from the point of oblivion, it now looks like the UAW under the leadership of newly-elected President Bob King might actually beginning to return phoenix-like to renewed growth.

 

 

There are 50,000 more jobs in the automobile industry than there were a year ago, and economists expect that by 2012, the industry will be up 182,000 jobs. Taking all these factors together, the combination of new jobs and new investments in fuel-efficient, hybrid, and electric vehicles, we can see that it actually is possible to do industrial policy in a way that both protects jobs and reorients industries to serve a general public good (in this case, reducing CO2 emissions and fossil fuel use).

That being said, the auto bailouts were far from perfect and there are many negative lessons we can learn about how to do things better next time. First, far too much of a sacrifice was asked of UAW workers both in terms of lost jobs, lower wages and pension benefits, and the supreme risk taken by the replacement of cash payments into the union's health care and pension plans with what could have been useless company stock. While this was in no small part driven by Congressional Republicans exercising their hatred of unions, it was also the case that the Obama Administration was far too willing to buy into the "shared sacrifice" narrative without thinking about what the consequences of lost jobs and lower wages would mean for economic recovery. In the future, it must be both union and public policy that worker concessions are explicitly time-limited rather than permanent, and contingent on an agreement by management to open the books and work out a binding plan for profit-sharing that compensates both for the losses incurred by workers and a fair share of the rewards of their sacrifice. Second, both to ground future industrial rescues in the reality of the labor market and to do a better job of "animal spirits" management, industrial rescues must come with explicit and accountable job retention and creation goals attached. Third, all future industrial rescues should be undertaken by the Department of Labour - not the Department of the Treasury, which is too deferential to the interests of the financial sector (for example, the Treasury wanted a lower GM IPO price that would have meant less money for new investment and less money for the U.S taxpayer). But in terms of positive lessons, here's what we've learned:

  1. Industrial policy can work. It's not a sure thing by any means, but it's an important point to reiterate: the public sector can intervene in the economy to save vulnerable industries, prevent layoffs, increase investment into new and innovative production, and create new jobs. This sounds rather obvious, but one has to keep in mind that neoclassical economists and neoconservative politicians have spent the last forty years shouting at the top of their lungs that this is impossible. In their eyes, the market is the pinnacle of efficiency and government can never better it; despite the fact that economic powerhouses like China and India do nothing but industrial policy, they would have you believe that the model is everything, the reality nothing.
  2. The government actually does have to take charge (which doesn't require micro-managing). Unlike in other cases we'll discuss below where the U.S avoided having any say in how the corporations they invested in were run, here, the U.S fired management, brought in new executives, made specific policy demands, and put pressure on executives to succeed. What that meant was that, instead of the usual market failure in which CEOs and top executives profit whether their companies grow or collapse due to crooked boards of directors and impotent shareholders, there was actual incentives brought to bear that made management need to succeed.
  3. The government has to focus on underlying issues of product quality and levels and direction of investment in the industry in question, not just on stock values and balance sheets. Prior to the Great Recession, the Big Three had been losing market share to foreign rivals like Toyota due to public preference for higher quality and higher fuel efficiency (and price competition from lower labor costs from overseas and non-union plants). They had foolishly responded by slashing their prices (through greatly expanding the amount of credit they offered to consumers) that had cut profit margins to the bone, which left them vulnerable to demand shocks and the entirely foreseeable costs of a growing retiree base. This, not the supposed greed of the UAW, was the major source of the Big Three's weakness. Thanks to Toyota's quality control scandals and the pressure from the Obama Administration to raise CAFE standards and thus produce more fuel-efficient, hybrid, and electric cars (with the added incentive of Cash for Clunkers) the Big Three have finally gotten their act together and out-competed Toyota on both quality and innovation, allowing them to return to profitability even when total sales of cars are down off their peak.
  4. What this leads us to is the all-important maxim that the government has to force dramatic changes that correct the problematic behavior of an industry.

The Road Not Taken - FIRE (Finance, Insurance, and Real Estate):

By contrast, we did none of these things when it came to the bailout of the financial sector, AIG, or our attempts to deal with the foreclosure crisis. The U.S government, by deliberately opting for non-voting stock and publicly decrying any intention of meddling with the management of the financial sector, by buying toxic assets from financial corporations at face value and allowing corporations to cook their balance sheets by waving mark-to-market requirements (rules that require that an asset be listed at the value it could actually be sold for, which in the case of toxic assets is somewhere south of zero), we have failed to establish a stable modus vivendi in the financial sector.

Largely driven by neoliberal thinkers within the Treasury, SEC, and Council of Economic Advisors, we made ourselves unable to use our position as a massive shareholder and outright owner of financial corporations to change the management of mismanaged firms (as we did in the auto industry), or to curb runaway executive compensation that could have restored real accountability for failure and recklessness, or in any way to redirect capital investment away from high-risk speculative ventures and back into industry, research and development, and genuine innovation. As a result, the derivatives and swap casino has returned.

Most critically, our unilateral disarmament meant that rather than conclusively dealing with the foreclosure crisis or the financial insolvencies it brought - as we did in the 1930s through the establishment of HOLC, FHA, and the Emergency and Glass-Steagall Banking Acts - we did not force a mass cramdown of mortgage prices or a writeoff of toxic assets and debts that could have settled our housing and financial crisis with certainty. Instead, we made the same mistake that Ireland made when it guaranteed bad debts at face value - we're better able to bear the cost, due to our stronger economy and independent currency and central bank, but essentially we made the same error. The point here is that you cannot reform sick industries if you decide to leave management prerogatives untouched.

Conclusion:

The first thing that has to happen is that progressives need to trumpet the success of industrial policy and win the intellectual battle for the conventional wisdom. Once this is done, then we can begin to apply our hard-won lessons, not merely in rescuing declining industries, but in establishing national initiatives to foster new domestic industries that can provide a firm foundation for our economy. It is so rare that we get a lost policy tool handed back to us - let's not drop it now.

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Hi Steven, glad to see you back, your friendly admin

Nice to see a post from you! There are some new rules on EP for posting and this has everything to do with page loads. Firstly, upload images and host them here locally. For some reason photobucket and imageshack especially cause the site to go to a crawl. I believe the reason is caching, which there is a lot of on this site due to it's heavy use of graphs and images, but for some reason it's just a crawl and it also could be due to my server configuration but if they are doing something beyond a simple link on their servers, too bad.....

Anyway, bottom line this site can host images and insert them for you, just click on the "insert image" link when creating a post, below the body text.

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Everything else looks good and I went ahead and did the above adjustments for you, since you haven't been around since we moved to the new server.

Ah, ok, will do!

I've been gone for a while.

On the positive side, I passed my comprehensive exams and am now officially All But Dissertation.

congratulations!

I know qualifiers are the bane of existence, good for you!

of all of the bail outs

It was the auto bail out that was most worth it. That said, they should have put more conditions on it for labor, now there is a two tier system going on and GM sells more cars in China, has production in China. They should have confronted China's tariffs on trucks instead.

Yes, but

While the public numbers all seem nice, the reality is the 'profit' made by the Treasury is illusory since the cost of the loan guarantees and what not are not used when estimating cost vs. gain.

Secondly I'd note that one primary reason why the US automakers are suddenly doing better (not well) is that the US dollar is plunging precipitously. This causes foreign imports to increase in cost.

Unfortunately the reality is that this feel good story is only short term.

The impact of FIRE on manufacturing is still increasing: health care costs, FICA, and so forth are still affecting US labor competitiveness hence the US auto industry.

You also failed to mention that car sales are at 30+ year lows.

This hardly bodes well for even the short term future of the Big 3.

Car sales

Well...actually, GM sales are up 12%, Chrysler up 17%, Ford up 24%, and Toyota down 3%.
http://www.freep.com/article/20101202/BUSINESS01/12020513/1318/Auto-reco...

EDIT: in regards to other points:

1. A more competitive dollar is a good thing.
2. FIRE doesn't have anything to do with FICA, and not much to do with health care costs.

OH so Rosy

Cause and Effect. All these bailouts did was to set a precedent for huge corporations to throw caution to the wind knowing if they get in trouble Uncle Sam and his bank named Joe Taxpayer will bail them out.

What about all the people who lost jobs with the bankruptcy and debt forgiveness at the beginning of this bailout?

What about the fact that average Joe Taxpayer was not allowed to buy into "free money on the table" with this great IPO unless his portfolio was a minimum of $100,000 yet China was allowed a $2 Billion buy in?

Already commercials are advertising sign and drive off is back with Zero down and Zero interest for such and such amount of time. This is what created an economic mess. Allowing people to purchase what they can not afford.

What will happen in January when the holiday jobs taper off and it is time pay off all the holiday credit that was used and how much more all their government "entitlements" will cost them in some form of taxes oh ya and the fines for those who will not purchase health insurance.

I'm not going to get too excited as an economy with an overabundance of unpaid credit will just crash again.

The whole point of this piece

is to point out that you can't take all of the bailouts together - you need to dis-aggregate them, because we did very different thing.

not done yet

good post. but I would point out that, based upon Obama's "love" of the working class, let's see what happens in a couple years when the retired auto workers have to start drawing down that VEBA fund to pay health care. Or heck, they could change the PBGC around so that GM could declare bankruptcy and dump their pensions. Or, maybe there's something buried in the new agreements that dumps the retiree agreements entirely.

I always liked that remark Obama made after the bank bonus uproar right after TARP. "we must honor existing contracts/agreements". Yet, he never said those words during the auto bailouts.

It's by no means

settled yet. You're quite right about that.