CaptainHawk1
Commodore
The UAW didn't focus on heavy trucks and SUVs while gas prices rose and no one would buy them.The UAW, which is obsolete, is very, very much responsible. They've been kicking and screaming about concessions every step of the way.
Ford saw the signs early and restructured, GM just stayed the course.
And of course, what's hurting them all is high health care costs for past and current workers in the US.
The Jobs bank was supposed to be a retraining effort. Before that they'd automate a job and just lay the people off. The Jobs Bank was supposed to take those people and retrain them for other jobs instead of just letting them go.You want to see a symptom of the problem with GM Management and the UAW? Read about the soon-to-be-defunct (allegedly) Jobs Bank program, and if you don't like the source just do a Google search. The only good thing about the bailout of GM is that the Feds forced this monstrosity of a program to shut down after a quarter of a century.
But of course, it didn't work that way in the end, the automakers just stuck them in a room and gave them a VCR and some playing cards and ignored them.
Look, I blame both of them. There's no question that poor business model decisions and things like legacy costs have hurt them, but it's been a concerted effort by both parties.
Neither one of them seem very concerned about their biggest issue and that is that the quality of their product is crap and can't compete with Honda or Toyota.
The problem is that the Detroit 3 weren't diversified enough to be able to handle when consumer tastes and the economy would change.
Jackpot.