May 30, 2009 5:41 AM

Fixing Detroit's Bailout Blues

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CBSNews
General Motors world headquarters is shown in Detroit, in this Tuesday, April 21, 2009 file photo. GM said Wednesday May 27, 2009 that not enough of its bondholders agreed to swap their debt for company stock, meaning the troubled automaker is almost cert

General Motors world headquarters is shown in Detroit, in this Tuesday, April 21, 2009 file photo. GM said Wednesday May 27, 2009 that not enough of its bondholders agreed to swap their debt for company stock, meaning the troubled automaker is almost cert (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

(CBS)  This editorial column was written by Gregory L. Rosston.


GM and Chrysler have come back for government money. Now it is nearly $30 billion and could get bigger, so we should tell them to produce 50 mile a gallon cars, pay their employees well and do lots of other good stuff and appoint a "car czar committee" to ensure they do the right things. Or should we? Running Detroit from Washington is the perfect way to ensure that consumers don't benefit from competition.

Government officials are extremely dedicated, smart, and unlikely to be good at running a car company, but they are likely to be in the midst of Washington politics. If Toyota and Honda do an even better job than they have so far, we might see calls for increased taxation, import duties, voluntary restraint agreements all designed to insulate Detroit from the vagaries of the market. Higher prices and reduced innovation would be the order of the day. Not a good plan for America.

The government should harness the power of consumers and provide the right incentives for the car companies. Instead of a handout with lots of strings attached, there are two simple things that the government could do that would protect consumers, the environment and the government investment much more.

First, any bill to provide capital to the auto industry should include a gas tax to finally get the price of gasoline in line with its true costs to society. One example would be to have the gas tax go up 50 cents per gallon each year for the next 6 years so that 6 years from now there would be a $3 a gallon tax (and then index it for inflation). That is probably much closer to true environmental and security costs of gasoline.

The tax increase would be gradual to provide time to retool and for consumers to adjust their habits and auto fleets. Most importantly, no one in Washington would have to tell Detroit what to produce. Consumers would be clamoring for fuel efficient cars. And now is the time to do it - Detroit has little choice but to accept this deal. It could also lead to a more general carbon tax that would help with the fight against climate change.

There are two big concerns - that in the time of economic turmoil we should not be increasing tax burdens on anyone, and that increasing the gas tax would cause undue hardship to low-income families. Any tax increase should take account of these issues, and there are many ways to do so without sacrificing the important efficiency gains from setting the price of gasoline nearer its true cost so people adjust their habits.

For example, a 50 cent a gallon tax on a driver with a 20 mpg car who drives 10,000 miles per year would be $250 or about $20 per month. One way to offset the cost would be to use the tax revenues to offset the first $250 of social security taxes in year one and a lesser additional amount each year as people are able to shift to higher mileage cars, drive less, take more mass transit, etc. People would get the money back and make better decisions for our planet and the government would not become Detroit's marketing experts. In addition, reducing social security taxes might make it easier for people to be hired.

Second, any new funding for the auto companies should come with a "matching fund" requirement. Partnering with private investors instead of being the sole new lender would minimize the need for government oversight. The government would not provide the entire amount of the bailout loans, but instead would require that private investors participate in the funding.

The private investors would supply loans on exactly the same terms and conditions, with maybe at a 3-5% interest premium. But all claims, covenants, etc. would be identical. Therefore because private investors are putting up real money (and lots of it) themselves, they will have the incentive to ensure good management at the auto companies and the need for federal government micromanagement would be reduced substantially.
Tying funding to an increase in the gasoline tax to a reasonable level and requiring private investors to partner with the government in providing financing together allow the government to protect all of us, but do so in a much more efficient manner than current proposals.

Gregory L Rosson is the Deputy Director of the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research and the Public Policy program at Stanford University..


Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment
by markangeloo June 27, 2009 12:22 PM EDT
North Korea has the A Bomb -- South Korea has Hyndai !!
Reply to this comment
by didserve May 31, 2009 7:32 AM EDT
Universal health care is a big part of the answer!
Reply to this comment
by whitemale08 May 29, 2009 9:48 PM EDT
If something has failed why make excuses for it?

If you buy a television and it doesn't work, you don't make excuses for it you take it back and get a new one.

END GLOBALIZATION NOW!
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by whitemale08 May 29, 2009 8:59 PM EDT
Why are we still listening to Wall Street/City of London when they lied to us and said 'globalization' would benifit us when it has globalization has totally been discredited?

Now these same bankers on Wall Street wants us to continue to bailout Goldman Sucks and JP Morgan, the very crooks that got us into this mess in the first place.
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by whitemale08 May 29, 2009 8:53 PM EDT
We could end this nightmare if we end 'globalization' and British-style 'free trade'.

Can someone please tell me why in the hell no one is now listening to people like me, Ross Perot, and Lyndon Larouche who have warned for years that 'globalization' would fail?

Please...are we that stupid and dumb?
Reply to this comment
by sjc_1 May 29, 2009 6:14 PM EDT
"to ensure good management"

How do 1 million shareholders holding 10 billion shares do this? How do you get a quorum among so many people and institutions to make changes in a corporation? This is the problem we face, corporate governance with a huge and diverse shareholder population. It takes the agency dilemma to new serious dimensions. Unless the investors have the control, more corporate malfeasance will follow.
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by eferrell2 May 29, 2009 9:27 AM EDT
There is a third option. We do nothing, and let them die a natural death.
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by jjjc3 May 29, 2009 8:39 AM EDT
The fact is that Washington is running Detroit in the right here and now. The die is already cast. Call it the bankruptcy strategy. The bankruptcy court will eliminate or reduce retiree pensions and fringe benefits to make both Chrysler and GM competitive with Japanese and German automakers manufacturing in the US. This same process will reduce the UAW to an anachronism - everything they fought for over 40 years will be wiped out by order of the court. It was not that GM couldn't build a darn good small car, it was that they couldn't sell them at a profit due to fixed costs. Controlling interest has already passed from the private sector to the general public. What is missing from the debate is an exit strategy for returning these trimmed down and more competitive companies back to private sector economics.
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