The Auto Bailout One Year Later: Was It Necessary? Did It Work?
By Randall Holcombe on Dec 8, 2009 in Bailouts, Budget and Tax Policy, Business, Economics, Government subsidies, Nationalization, Presidential Power, The State, free market
President Bush provided the initial bailout for GM and Chrysler in December 2008, so it’s reasonable to look back a year later and ask: Was the bailout necessary? Did it work?
In hindsight it is readily apparent that the answers are: No, and No.
President Bush argued that the bailout was needed to keep GM and Chrysler out of bankruptcy, because nobody would want to buy cars from the companies if they went bankrupt. There would be questions about whether warranties would be honored, whether dealers would be available for service, and other issues that would come up with a durable good purchase.
We can see that the bailout didn’t work, because after receiving bailout money from the Bush administration, and then another dose from the Obama administration, both companies declared bankruptcy in June anyway. And, because the bailout didn’t work, it’s easy to see that it wasn’t necessary.
In hindsight it is easy to see we should have allowed GM and Chrysler to go bankrupt last year. Perhaps they could have reorganized, shed some of their liabilities and become viable concerns again. Perhaps they would have had to liquidate, in which case their factories and their brands would have gone to companies that could have made better use of them. Indeed, that is what ultimately happened to Chrysler, which was taken over by Fiat.
What happened to GM was much worse.
Because GM accepted the bailout money, President Obama forced Rick Wagoner out as GM CEO. Americans should have been outraged at the precedent that, apparently, gives the president of the United States the power to determine who will be the CEO of a private corporation.
When GM declared bankruptcy, because of the federal money GM had received, President Obama strong-armed bondholders into accepting pennies on the dollar for the GM debt they held, while giving the United Auto Workers 17.5% ownership in the restructured company. Bankruptcy law does not give a company’s employees claims in front of debt holders.
The federal government seized 61% of the restructured GM, placing the government’s claims ahead of debt holders. This was unfair to the company’s bondholders, it effectively nationalized the automaker, and the nationalization and confiscation of bondholder assets makes it virtually impossible for GM to repay the federal government and escape its current status as a government-owned company.
The federal government has now sunk $50 billion into GM, and it is difficult to see how GM could ever raise enough money to buy their way out from under government control. Certainly they can’t borrow it, after the federal government screwed the previous bondholders.
The Bush administration went back on its word when it bailed out GM and Chrysler. They used TARP money for the bailouts. Treasury Secretary Paulson originally said the TARP money was only to be used only for financial institutions, and repeated that when the auto companies originally approached the administration for a bailout. So, GM and Chrysler went to Congress, but when Congress refused to bail them out Bush and Paulson did what they said they wouldn’t and gave the companies TARP money.
The problem originated with TARP, which essentially gave Secretary Paulson a blank check. When you’re spending someone else’s money, it’s easy to spend it irresponsibly.
We’ve all heard that hindsight is 20-20, but on the anniversary of the auto industry bailout we need to articulate why it was such a bad idea so that it becomes a part of the public consciousness. We need a public understanding that the bailout was a huge mistake to keep it from being a public policy precedent.





















You missed the best part. Even with “cash for clunkers” they weren’t able to sell enough cars to make a profit. Since emerging from bankruptcy, GM has lost over $1.2 billion, and that doesn’t count fourth quarter losses not yet reported.
Get that sinking GM feeling!
Jim Davidson | Dec 9, 2009 | Reply
This is an extremely bias piece, coming from someone who claims to be nonpartisan. It is true that Bush was initially responsible for using TARP funds to bail out GM with $17 Billion in loans, with an additional $4 billion if needed at a later time. Bush’s actions were unprecedented and per the spelled out Troubled Asset Stipulations, I considered them illegal. However, the Bush administration left Obama no formal plan for restructuring and everything subsequent was 100% done on Obama’s watch. This included: appointing a law student, whose only job experience was working as an advocate for the Leftist, Soros funded center for American Progress, as the head person to restructure GM.
Once Obama took over, the bailout grew to $68.5 Billion. In addition, Obama Administration attorneys were able to pull of the impossible and twist the anti-democratic jargon they had used in crafting the additional bailout to legally pass muster with the Courts-paving the way for them to circumvent 230 years of legal precedent and steal from GM’s secured bond holders to award the unsecured union bond holders (owned nothing) a 55% ownership stake in General Motors.
Your article is shameful. You claim to perform independent research, but relying on MSNBC is nothing of the sort. Try researching factual data and non bias business research. First and foremost review precedent on Bankruptcy asset distributions and compare them to what happen here. The egregious actions undertaken by Obama and his Statist Cohorts are inexcusable. The interests (credit unions etc) owning $20 Billion dollars in Secured bonds received .12 to .14 cents on a dollar and the Union’s $10 Billion in unsecured bonds were redeemed for .77 to .89 cents on a dollar. Yes, Bush bears some responsibility but nowhere near as much as Obama. Accordingly, Obama is 100% responsible for pilfering the secured assets from debt holders and using $69 Billion dollars in American Tax Dollars to gift General Motors to his Union Buddies—especially when less than a year prior GM and all of its subsidiaries could have been acquired on the market for less than $30 Billion dollars.
Cris | Dec 9, 2009 | Reply
Randall, please read Obama’s opinions in the interview below, 12/08/09.
ABC News: Obama: Auto Bailout ‘Necessary’
Cris | Dec 9, 2009 | Reply
I don’t understand what Cris is complaining about. How is the article biasED? Are you worried that Bush is taking some of the blame that belongs to Obama? Let’s just blame the federal gov’t in general (White House, House, and Senate).
Russell | Dec 14, 2009 | Reply