Today is
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Mold Big 3 Bail-Out After DTV Coupon Program
Admittedly, it does "spread the wealth," but less obnoxiously so than the current TARP legislation. Also, it doesn't address American health care costs - one of the primary reasons why Detroit and other American manufacturing industries can't win against the global competition, nor does it tackle mismanagement. It's not the end-all to our economic problems.
Sure, it'll look like we're subsidizing American labor - but so what? We're on the verge of the Great Depression 2.0 and I can't think of any other country's labor I would rather help subsidize at this point in time. Like anything else, the coupon program can be abused, but tight legislation with stiff penalties should apply. I know, now I'm really sounding crazy.
But I see few other ways to offer a bottom-up stimulus for the Big 3 and guarantee most of the revenue stays in the U.S., help move product off the lots, retain jobs, pay operational expenses, restore confidence, get the Big 3 past the credit crisis and give the economy a bigger shot in the arm than the $750 billion earmarked for Wall Street ever could - all in one swoop. This program would lay the groundwork for part two of the automaker stimulus, the $25 billion already designated for future “green” auto technology.
I'm not pretending like this suggestion has any chance at all, but the question is no longer why, but why not?
4 comments:
The Big 3 would want no part of this. They would rather have the $15 billion cash up front.
This idea is the perfect tonic to jumpstart the American auto industry. But this will never fly because globalization demands that the auto unions be crushed and obsoleted.
Absolutely. But I'm a little surprised by congress and Obama asking the Big 3 for a game plan, when the only game plan Wall Street offered was actually proposed by Bush and Paulson and was three pages long. That eventually got them $750 billion.
How Obama handles the Big 3 and UAW will be the litmus test for all of his campaign promises and statements.
This idea almost made it. Democrat Tom Harkin pulled the "cash for clunkers" provision out of the stimulous plan today.
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