Analyst Sees Policies Favoring GM, Chrysler

Government Ownership of General Motors Co. and investment in Chrysler Group LLC will lead to policies favoring those companies, predicts Sean McAlinden, the chief economist for the Center for Automotive Research. While the leader of the White House's Automotive Task Force, Ron Bloom, repeats emphatically that the Obama Admin. policy is to sell its investment as soon as practical, McAlinden doesn't

William Diem, Correspondent

September 1, 2009

1 Min Read
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Government Ownership of General Motors Co. and investment in Chrysler Group LLC will lead to policies favoring those companies, predicts Sean McAlinden, the chief economist for the Center for Automotive Research.

While the leader of the White House's Automotive Task Force, Ron Bloom, repeats emphatically that the Obama Admin. policy is to sell its investment as soon as practical, McAlinden doesn't believe it.

“Government participation…will result in national champions, and policy will replace competition, because they have a vested interest,” he says at MBS.

All China's big auto makers are owned by the state, and China policy aims at consolidating them so that a handful can compete in the world. Lower Saxony in Germany is a controlling investor in Volkswagen AG, and Germany has defended a law, challenged by Europe, which protects Lower Saxony's equity position.

But McAlinden uses Renault SA as his example. France took over the company in 1946, because the owner had collaborated with the Nazis. France still owns 15%, and Renault credits the government holding with giving the company stability, without fear of a hostile takeover.

McAlinden is not against the investment by the U.S. and Canada of more than $100 billion in the auto industry.

“Without that money, commitment and support, we would have lost two of our three auto firms,” he says.

Government intervention is not unprecedented, McAlinden notes. It is involved in every sector of industry, from agriculture to airlines. Autos are regulated on safety, fuel economy, site environmental policy, trade, highways and the legal tort system.

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