| Labor
Pains
November 24, 2005
BY HENRY PAYNE
Copyright 2005 National Review
Online
Detroit, Michigan--Massive job cuts at General Motors,
America's largest carmaker-- coupled with the bankruptcy of
Delphi, America's biggest autoparts maker--have provoked predictable
handwringing from liberal pundits who worry that America is
"losing its manufacturing base." But the wrenching
change now buffeting the auto industry defies the usual press
formulas. Just listen to Steve Miller a turnaround specialist
who is steering Delphi's restructuring process. He exploded
the myth of America's "endangered" union manufacturing
jobs at his October press conference announcing Delphi's move
into Chapter 11: "We cannot continue to pay $65 an hour
for someone to cut the grass and remain competitive."
Grass cutting is a manufacturing job?
Miller's frank assessment of unsustainable labor contracts
is a refreshing dose of candor in an industry that for too
long has talked around union-labor costs in a way that is
totally divorced from the realities of the U.S. labor market--much
less the global labor market.
While America's national press has gleefully covered the front-office
shenanigans of Republican fat cats like Enron's Ken Lay, it
has entirely missed the disease eating away at the roots of
American manufacturing: Behind the threat of strike, greedy
Democratic union bosses have built an unsustainable entitlement-wage
culture that is now crashing spectacularly in America's heartland,
disrupting lives, and threatening some of America's biggest
publicly traded companies.
Take grass cutting. As defined by the current United Auto
Worker contract negotiated with the "Big Five" (GM,
Ford, Chrysler, and top parts makers Delphi and Visteon),
an auto "production worker" is a job description
that covers anything from mowing grass to cleaning the toilets.
In the real world, these jobs would be outsourced to $8 an
hour, no-benefit wage earners, but on Planet Big Five, these
jobs get the same wages as any auto line-worker: an average
$26 an hour ($60,000 a year) plus benefits that bring the
company's total cost per worker to a staggering $65 an hour.
But at least the grass cutters are working for their pay.
The UAW contract also guarantees that 12,000 autoworkers get
full wage for doing nothing. On the heels of Miller's straight-talk,
the Detroit News reported that "12,000 American autoworkers,
instead of bending sheet metal, spend their days counting
the hours in a jobs bank." These aren't jobs. And they
certainly aren't being "lost" to China.
"We just go in (to Ford's Michigan Truck Plant) and
play crossword puzzles, watch videos that someone brings in
or read the newspaper," The News quoted one UAW worker
as saying. "Otherwise, I've just sat."
For Delphi, this idled labor cost $400 million in the second
quarter of this year alone. Facing similar numbers until the
contract's end in 2007, Delphi took refuge in bankruptcy.
"The jobs bank must be eliminated," says Miller.
"Paying people not to work is just not sustainable."
As the auto companies have increased productivity through
automation, the UAW calculated that jobs banks would make
it too expensive for automakers to close plants and lay off
workers. While that plan has worked, it has severely damaged
the long-term viability of the industry--and by extension,
future job creation. It also led to this week's GM bloodbath,
as the company struggles to close a wage gap with American
internationals (foreign automakers manufacturing in the U.S.)
that now stands at $1319 per vehicle produced.
Simply put, Big Three autoworkers have been living in a fantasy
world.
Statistics tell the tale. In his landmark study of the 2003
Big Five contract, Sean McLinden of the Center for Automotive
Research (CAR) found that "in 1960, the UAW was 16 percent
higher than the overall U.S. wage rate. . . . By 2003, the
UAW average rate (with COLA) was 68-percent higher than the
average manufacturing rate of $15.74 an hour."
McLinden notes that the contract reads as if autoworkers
labor in a vacuum, without regard for market forces. "The
workers involved will not lose their jobs at the company--they
must be transferred to other facilities, bought out, voluntarily
retired, or supported by protected status programs (jobs banks).
Workers who refuse to transfer after layoff will... eventually
be paid 100 percent of their straight pay. Indeed, UAW employment
can only fall at the rate of natural retirement."
Furthermore, UAW members are guaranteed a traditional "30
years and out" provision, meaning that many retirees
begin drawing full pensions in their early Fifties, burdening
the Big Five with unrivaled legacy costs. Delphi, for example,
shoulders $22 per worker-hour in legacy costs compared to
as little as 25 cents for independent competitors like Leer
and Johnson Controls.
Miller stresses that Delphi's competition for these jobs
are not foreign laborers in China or Mexico--but workers right
here in the Unites States. Given the huge productivity advantages
of U.S. factories, relatively high-paid American autoworkers
remain competitive with Mexican workers paid $3 an hour. CAR's
McLinden confirms this. His analysis of independent suppliers
(workers not covered by the fat Big Five contract) covering
19,379 UAW members in the U.S. found an "average wage
of $15.76 an hour--remarkably close to the $15.77 per hour
U.S. average manufacturing wage in 2003."
Miller does not deny that some labor-intensive auto-parts
jobs (such as spark plugs manufacturing) must be moved abroad.
But in production, where assembly, transportation, or quality
are key factors (in the making of dashboards, for example),
manufacturers will rely on U.S. workers--assuming they don't
cost two to four times the market rate. Indeed, Japanese manufacturers
and their suppliers have created 60,000 good-paying jobs for
Americans.
The coming months will be painful for many American autoworkers.
Accustomed to a certain lifestyle, they will see their wages
cut in half, jeopardizing second homes, college tuitions,
and car payments. One blue-collar Delphi worker interviewed
by the Detroit News makes $103,000 a year operating a forklift
and fears the consequences if his pay is drastically reduced.
But many Americans will ask how a forklift operator felt entitled
to a six-figure income in the first place (according to Bureau
of Labor Statistics, the average forklift operator wage in
the U.S. is $26,000). It is an opportune time for political
leadership to step to the plate and speak with candor, but
the signs are not encouraging.
UAW leaders are threatening strikes, and their Democratic
allies are parroting tired slogans of government bailouts
and trade protectionism. Michigan's Democratic governor Jennifer
Granholm recently traveled to Washington, D.C. to stump for
auto-import tariffs, while Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton
demanded President Bush convene a "manufacturing summit"
to examine a taxpayer bailout for the Big Five's "enormouslegacy
costs, including paying the health care and pensions of retirees."
These dinosaurs insist on turning back the clock, but Steve
Miller understands that America's manufacturing future will
only be lost if it loses sight of market economics: "We
are in a market for human capital," he explains "If
you pay too much for a particular class of employee, you go
broke."
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