Seems like the UAW has a better grasp on GM's situation than management! See the excerpts from a NY Times article below. Even though I believe that union wages are a big part of the problem, it doesn't take a rocket scientist to understand where GM has been going wrong. Maybe the UAW should run the company!
Key quote - from labor:
"Mr. Gettelfinger also said G.M.'s core problem is that its cars and
trucks, designed and engineered by management, have not been selling.
"To us, product is No. 1, first and foremost," he said." - Ed
(NY Times Article)
While many workers and local union officials say they are willing to consider concessions to help G.M., they also express belief that management has not indicated it would make its own sacrifices. Workers and local union leaders say Mr. Wagoner needs to take a step like that of the Ford Motor Company's chief executive, William Clay Ford Jr. Although Ford earned $1.2 billion in the first quarter, Mr. Ford said in April that he would accept no compensation of any kind until the company's automotive profits improved.
As Don Swegman, president of a union local in Indiana, said in an interview Tuesday: "We're being asked to sacrifice, and I think the sacrifice should go uphill as well as downhill.
"I think the bulk of the members on the floor feel the same way. If you look at Ford, their C.E.O., Mr. Ford, has decided not to take any pay at all until they turn things around. That would go a long ways to making us feel better. Everyone needs a paycheck, don't get me wrong."
Referring to Mr. Wagoner, Mr. Swegman added, "But does he need $10 million, when under his leadership the company loses $1.1 billion?"
G.M. officials noted that while Mr. Wagoner's base salary did not decline in 2004 from 2003, his overall pay package of roughly $10 million was more than 40 percent lower last year than in 2003 because the company's declining share price eroded long-term performance bonuses tied to stock performance. They also noted that half of Mr. Wagoner's pay was in stock options. Though the options are valued at about $5 million using complex accounting methodology, they are not actually worth any money until G.M. shares return to $53.92.
Asked about the matter of pay, Mr. Gettelfinger, whose own compensation is around $140,000 a year, said: "There's always been an awareness among the workers in the field about this issue. In fact, we've talked about this at almost every collective bargaining convention since I've been involved. That's an issue, it's always there."
Mr. Gettelfinger also said that G.M.'s continued payment of $1.1 billion annually in dividends was another factor, as well as its roughly $20 billion in cash on hand. While its debt is in the hundreds of billions, it comes due over several decades, and most financial analysts say a bankruptcy filing is not imminent. But down the road a few years, they say, bankruptcy is not out of the question.
Mr. Gettelfinger also said G.M.'s core problem is that its cars and trucks, designed and engineered by management, have not been selling. "To us, product is No. 1, first and foremost," he said.