(From the LA Times)
The foreign nonunion auto companies located in the South have a plan to reduce wages and benefits at their factories in the United States. And to do it, they need to destroy the United Auto Workers.
Last week, Senate Republicans from some Southern states went to work trying to do just that, on the foreign car companies' behalf. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), Sen. Bob Corker ( R-Tenn.) and Sen. Richard C. Shelby (R-Ala.) -- representatives from states that subsidize companies such as Honda, Volkswagen, Toyota and Nissan -- first tried to force the UAW to take reductions in wages and benefits as a condition for supporting the auto industry bailout bill. When the UAW refused, those senators torpedoed the bill.
They claimed that they couldn't support the bill without specifics about how wages would be "restructured." They didn't, however, require such specificity when it came to bailing out the financial sector. Their grandstanding, and the government's generally lackluster response to the auto crisis, highlight many of the problems that have caused our current economic mess: the lack of concern about manufacturing, the privileged way our government treats the financial sector, and political support given to companies that attempt to slash worker's wages.
When one compares how the auto industry and the financial sector are being treated by Congress, the double standard is staggering. In the financial sector, employee compensation makes up a huge percentage of costs. According to the New York state comptroller, it accounted for more than 60% of 2007 revenues for the seven largest financial firms in New York.
At Goldman Sachs, for example, employee compensation made up 71% of total operating expenses in 2007. In the auto industry, by contrast, autoworker compensation makes up less than 10% of the cost of manufacturing a car. Hundreds of billions were given to the financial-services industry with barely a question about compensation; the auto bailout, however, was sunk on this issue alone.
UAW President Ron Gettelfinger realized that the existence of the union was under attack, which is why he refused to give in to the Senate Republicans' demands that the UAW make further concessions. I say "further" because the union has already conceded a lot. Its 2007 contract introduced a two-tier contract to pay new hires $15 an hour (instead of $28) with no defined pension plan and dramatic cuts to their health insurance. In addition, the UAW agreed that healthcare benefits for existing retirees would be transferred from the auto companies to an independent trust. With the transferring of the healthcare costs, the labor cost gap between the Big Three and the foreign transplants will be almost eliminated by the end of the current contracts.
These concessions go some distance toward leveling the playing field (retiree costs are still a factor for the Big Three). But what the foreign car companies want is to level -- which is to say, wipe out -- the union. They currently discourage their workforce from organizing by paying wages comparable to the Big Three's UAW contracts. In fact, Toyota's per-hour wages are actually above UAW wages.
However, an internal Toyota report, leaked to the Detroit Free Press last year, reveals that the company wants to slash $300 million out of its rising labor costs by 2011. The report indicated that Toyota no longer wants to "tie [itself] so closely to the U.S. auto industry." Instead, the company intends to benchmark the prevailing manufacturing wage in the state in which a plant is located. The Free Press reported that in Kentucky, where the company is headquartered, this wage is $12.64 an hour, according to federal labor statistics, less than half Toyota's $30-an-hour wage.
If the companies, with the support of their senators, can wipe out or greatly weaken the UAW, they will be free to implement their plan.
But their plan will not work. The Bush administration is likely to keep the Big Three alive long enough for President-elect Barack Obama to construct a real solution. Democrats and even most Republicans understand that a nation that has already lost 2 million jobs this year cannot afford to put at risk 3 million more.
What the economy needs now is rising wages so the country can get on the path of wage-driven consumption growth. That means stronger unions. Indeed, I believe eventually it will mean the unionization of the entire U.S. auto industry.
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Great diary
Digg please
Rec’d!
Thanks for posting this here, Bruce. For those of you who didn’t click through to the LATimes link, here is the background on Bruce:
Excellent.
Thank you.
I just wish we could find a way to dump management (and Cerberus) as the price of saving these companies. I hate Nardelli and Wagoner as much as the rethugs hate the UAW. Can’t we just nationalize ‘em? ;-P
Don’t forget to comment on Digg as well - counts as another Digg! And then thumbs-up rate previous comments - each one counts as another Digg!
Let’s really start pushing this!
So are you going to push that everything you agree to the banks must agree to I mean fair is fair right?
Thank you Bruce for all your hard work, and for bringing us this information. We need facts to fight the right-wing spin on labor, unions and what it means to our economy.
Studies have shown that well-paid workers are more productive and produce goods of higher quality. Kind of a no-brainer.
Seems to me like these ’southern gentlemen’ yearn for the days of slave-labor and they are really trying hard to get there.
I’m still trying to figure out why their constituents vote for them. The prices of everything is going up. But the workers are supposed to (continue to) take more cuts in wages and benefits.
You know - people have to be able to afford to buy stuff. If they can’t it doesn’t matter what you make - you won’t be able to sell it. What then?
http://www.iht.com/articles/20.....xlabor.php
Are you going to push to ban any slave labor parts from entering the country there is no way your workers can be expected to compete with that.
Bush is an oil man even if Obama helps you retool to make all hybrid cars it will take awhile for you to pass Toyota in gas saving tech.
But if you go under now gas saving cars will be the only ones Americans can buy with a few exceptions.
Oil is below $30 a barrel Bush needs you guys the Saudi’s need you you have leverage if you would just realize it.
What about pushing for National Healthcare
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_care_in_Japan
You could compete with Japan then on cost.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H.....ted_States
Imagine all the savings if we had the same costs as Japan and we insured everyone. Healthcare emergencies are the number one cause of bankruptcy in this country I imagine that includes people who default on car loans.
Plus the Japanese live longer than us lets see a GOPer argue that our healthcare is better than theirs!
$12.64 an hour to build a car.
I would laugh in your face.
I know a few things about cars and I am here to tell you this will not happen.
They could completely dissolve the UAW,what is to stop them from reorganizing under a new name?
Collective bargaining is not going away and Mitch McConnell might as well quit dreaming.
Thanks Bruce. I wouldn’t have seen this if you hadn’t posted it here at Oxdown too.
why do REPUBLICAN SOUTHERN SENATORS hate hard working American (workers) auto manufacturers
Are they including the wages of their workers in Japan and benefits?
Imagine if we told American Doctors and nurses that they had to compete with Indian doctors.
We pay more than the rest of the world for drug costs and healthcare as a profit making business insures that healthcare costs will be higher never mind advertising cost.
Never mind that when old drugs lose their patent protection the drug companies change the drug a little bit so they can keep their monopoly going they don’t necessarily make a better drug.
In fact lots of new drugs don’t act better than their replacements they are just more profitable.
This *cough* research cost to make new drugs to protect patents and profits inflates our drug costs.
In a sense they game the system to make profits and drain us of cash in the profits.
I have been calling capitalism “the new fuedalism” or novo slavery. Capital runs the game and have been trying to crush labor since the capitalist system was morphed out of fuedalism where supposedly there was a balance / struggle between capital and labor.
The fact is that capital has been wining every battle and labor as a movement has been in retreat, and worse than that many working stiffs identify with republicans like the infamous “joe the plumber” who seem to think that they are being hurt more by government (the people) than by capital - their owners who control their economic lives.
Labor is seen by the right as something like a commodity, you go for the best price so as to maximize profits for the owners (capitalists) the ones who don’t work, the shareholders. When productivity is up wages and benefits don’t improve, profits do! When profits drop, wages are cut and people are laid off and the remaining staff are forced to produce the same output - productivity increses.
Time to storm the bastille and drive the capitalists into the sea.
My greatest concern is with the insurance industry which is a useless cannibalization of an urgent need by the american public. One out of every three dollars spent is skimmed off by or as a result of these leeches.
Because in these Southern so called “Right to work” States, these people are so brainwashed they hate Unions! Here’s a sample of the LTTEs in our local rag, which pretends to be a “Liberal” paper in a Austin.
As you can see, in these people’s minds, Unions & Democrats are closely linked. These people hate Democrats, liberals and there is no small element of racism in this calculation, as well. They are too fooolish and blinded by their hate to realize what is happening. You cannot have a discussion with them, because they are all knowing and will repeat the party line, they don’t believe in global climate change-”It’s an scam to make Al Gore rich.” “No where does it say your kids are entitled to free education!” I’ve given up on the lot of them.
I forgot the link.
The GOP sees labor as a cost to be minimized not as a tool for production. Mechanics who’s job depends on tools buy the best ones they can afford. Because it pays off in the long run. Short term profit seekers buy tools they can throw away.
We have a disconnect between Harvard MBA’s and Chicago School of Economic morons and working people.
I’ve seen 5 new hires work a double drive threw at McDonalds when 3 experienced people could handle the rush quicker and cheaper.
But try explaining to McDonalds 5 kids making $5 an hour is more expensive than 3 kids making $7 an hour. The bosses just see $5 an hour as cheaper than $7.
Somebody needs to do an oped.
Got a link that sounds very interesting.
A start
http://www.commondreams.org/views06/0818-27.htm
Some of my figures came from our health care community meeting
Thanks bookmarked:)
“However, an internal Toyota report, leaked to the Detroit Free Press last year, reveals that the company wants to slash $300 million out of its rising labor costs by 2011. The report indicated that Toyota no longer wants to “tie [itself] so closely to the U.S. auto industry.” Instead, the company intends to benchmark the prevailing manufacturing wage in the state in which a plant is located. The Free Press reported that in Kentucky, where the company is headquartered, this wage is $12.64 an hour, according to federal labor statistics, less than half Toyota’s $30-an-hour wage.
If the companies, with the support of their senators, can wipe out or greatly weaken the UAW, they will be free to implement their plan.”
This is horse hooey… there is no way Toyota expects or plans to pay their workers at this rate. Fear mongering at its best.
“Indeed, I believe eventually it will mean the unionization of the entire U.S. auto industry.”
A pipe dream; the UAW hasn’t unionized Toyota or others yet and they are unlikely to do so. Wages are only part of the reason workers vote in an union and Toyota treats their employees well… hence no union.
ps, why are union workers called ‘working’ or ‘working families’? Does that mean that if you have a job and aren’t in a union you don’t work?
Two words: British Leyland.
I have two other words for you:
Saab-Scania.
My response to Shelby:
“The price of meat has just gone up
An’ yer ol’ lady has just gone down . . . “
Look here brother,
Who you jivin’ with that Cosmik Debris?
Saab is owned by GM since 1990. Thanks for missing the point. Nationalizing the auto industry is a terrible idea, especially with a dearth of car guys in the government.