Plant closures, layoffs mount in US and Europe
By Patrick O’Connor
18 October 2008

Industrial and manufacturing firms in the US and Europe are sharply
curtailing production and laying off workers as world economic growth
stalls. Layoffs and plant closings, combined with a series of economic
reports released in recent days, indicate that the US and European
economies are in a significantly worse state than economists had
previously believed.

US car makers, teetering on the edge of bankruptcy, are stepping up
their attacks on auto workers’ jobs. General Motors announced Thursday
that it would lay off 1,600 workers at three plants, one in Delaware
and two in Michigan (Pontiac and Detroit). GM also announced this week
it was bringing forward previously planned plant closures in
Janesville, Wisconsin, Grand Rapids, Michigan and Moraine, Ohio.

The former industrial giant has slashed its US workforce by nearly
half since 2000, with the company’s unionized workers down from
133,000 to just 72,000. More layoffs within the next few months are
expected to be announced.

Chrysler and GM have held a series of merger discussions in a
desperate attempt to find a way out of their financial crises.
Chrysler is also considering other merger or partnership options with
Renault-Nissan. Cerebus Capital Management, Chrysler’s owner, has
already eliminated 22,000 jobs since the beginning of 2007 and plans
to cut at least 4,000 more next year, leaving the auto company with
just over 60,000 workers.

Any merger involving Chrysler or GM would inevitably mean the
elimination of tens of thousands more jobs. Gerald Myers, a former
auto company chief executive and now management professor at the
University of Michigan, spoke to the Washington Post about a potential
Chrysler-GM merger. “It would be a bloodbath,” he declared. “Chrysler
would be cut up into small pieces. GM would spit out the things it
doesn’t want and hang onto the things it does want.”

A Federal Reserve report released Thursday showed US industrial
production down 2.8 percent in September, the biggest decline since
December 1974 and substantially higher than the 0.8 percent decline
expected by economists. For the third quarter as whole, industrial
production was down 6 percent on an annualized basis.

A separate report issued by the Philadelphia Federal Reserve showed a
record decline in manufacturing activity in the Philadelphia region.
The report followed the release earlier this week of similar data for
New York State.

A survey released yesterday by the University of Michigan showed that
US consumer spending has fallen more sharply this month than in any
other month since records were first maintained in 1978.

The housing market, another key indicator, continues to decline. The
Commerce Department released data yesterday showing that the
construction of new homes fell by 6.3 percent last month, far higher
than the anticipated 1.6 percent decrease. Home construction is now at
its slowest pace since January 1991.

The contraction is not confined to the US. In Germany, Europe’s
largest economy, the government this week revised its anticipated 2009
gross domestic product (GDP) growth figures from 1.2 percent to 0.2
percent. On Wednesday, the day before the official estimates were
released, a report jointly issued by four leading German economic
institutes also predicted a 0.2 growth rate, but warned that in a
“worst-case scenario” the economy could shrink by 0.8 percent. The
survey warned that up to 400,000 German jobs could go in 2009.

A report issued this week by the European Automobile Association found
registration for new passenger vehicles in Europe down 8.2 percent
last month compared to last year. Two large auto parts makers in
Germany this week announced “significant” layoffs of temporary
workers, and the German auto giant Daimler said it would close its
Sterling Trucks division, shuttering plants in Ontario, Canada and
Oregon.

Other European countries have also reassessed their expected growth
rates. Reuters reported Thursday: “Italy has cut its 2009 growth
forecast to 0.5 percent from 0.9 percent previously and French Prime
Minister Francois Fillon said earlier this week that his country could
undershoot an official projection for growth of 1.0 percent next
year.”

The International Monetary Fund expects the Spanish economy to
experience a severe recession next year, with minus 2 percent GDP
growth. A Reuters quarterly poll of 24 economists released this week
found that 23 believed Britain was already in a recession; the median
GDP growth forecast for 2009 was just 0.2 percent.

Nissan announced this week it was cutting 1,680 jobs at its plant in
Barcelona, Spain. The Guardian reported that Volkswagen-owned Spanish
car manufacturer Seat is planning to temporarily lay off 4,700 workers
at one of its plants in Barcelona. This follows the company’s earlier
announcement that it was reducing annual production by 5 percent and
laying off at least 750 workers. Also in Spain, tire manufacturer
Bridgestone is reportedly planning to cut 2,800 jobs out of a total of
3,300 in two plants.

Paul Betts, commentator with the Financial Times, noted on Thursday:
“Not a single day has gone by this week without some large European
company announcing a significant scaling down of earlier investment
plans, the shelving of an important acquisition or all sorts of other
cost-cutting and restructuring measures.”

The price of oil dropped below $70 a barrel this week for this first
time in more than a year, reflecting slowing rates of world production
and consumption.

The extreme volatility, mostly downward, on global stock markets,
despite the series of bank bailouts announced in the US and Europe,
reflects a growing awareness that the financial crisis is merely an
expression of deeper contradictions wracking the world economy.

“Investors are recognizing that the financial crisis is not the
fundamental problem,” an article in Thursday’s New York Times noted.
“It has merely amplified economic ailments that are now intensifying:
vanishing paychecks, falling home prices and diminished spending. And
there is no relief in sight.”

It is now widely acknowledged that none of the financial bailout
measures will prevent the spread of recession. The trillions of
dollars in public money being funneled into the world’s banking and
financial institutions are aimed at insulating the financial elite
from the consequences of the crisis for which they themselves are
responsible.

No government has proposed an emergency rescue package aimed at the
social catastrophe engulfing the working class. There will be no
bailout for the millions of ordinary people threatened with the loss
of their jobs, savings or homes.

As the US presidential campaign enters its final two weeks amid the
intensifying economic crisis, the gulf between the two major parties
and the interests of the vast majority of the population has become
ever starker.

Republican candidate John McCain has attempted to simultaneously
engage in demagogic denunciations of the “greed and excess on Wall
Street” while promising further corporate deregulation and a 10
percent cut in the corporate tax rate. He has pledged to balance the
federal budget in five years, but has not explained how this is to be
done given that the Bush administration’s $2.25 trillion bailout
package is now anticipated to raise the budget deficit as high as $2
trillion. McCain has, however, said he would impose a one-year freeze
on all non-military spending and “reform” Social Security, Medicare,
and Medicaid.

Democratic candidate Barack Obama’s economic agenda likewise calls for
cuts in various business taxes. His main concession to popular
discontent is a promise to discontinue the Bush administration’s tax
cuts for people who earn more than $250,000 a year. At the same time
he pledges to “scour the federal budget line-by-line” to eliminate
social programs and reduce spending on other programs.

Congressional Democratic leaders are proposing a new $150 billion
economic stimulus package, a mere drop in the bucket in relation to
the social needs arising from the gathering slump. They have
enthusiastically backed the allocation of 15 times this sum to bail
out Wall Street.

Neither the politicians nor the media offer a serious explanation of
the roots of the economic crisis. They cannot, because the crisis is
an expression of the failure of the capitalist system which they
defend.

Successive Democratic and Republican administrations over the last
three decades have presided over the systematic dismantling of key
sections of basic industry. At the same time, financial speculation
flourished as the key mechanism through which a narrow elite generated
profits that were divorced from the productive process and the
creation of real value. The growth of financial parasitism, which took
on an increasingly criminal character, saw enormous wealth transferred
from the working class to the top 1 percent of the population. An
unprecedented degree of social inequality developed as the “real
economy” was hollowed out.

No “stimulus package” or other palliative is capable of resolving this
crisis.

The only answer is to be found in a socialist program. The major banks
and financial firms—together with the leading manufacturing, hi-tech,
communications, transportation and health and pharmaceutical
corporations—must be nationalized and converted into publicly-owned
enterprises, with full compensation for small shareholders, and placed
under the democratic control of the working class.

The fortunes accumulated by CEOs and financial speculators responsible
for the crisis must be confiscated and placed in a public fund to
compensate victims of predatory lending practices and home
foreclosures. A $3 trillion public works program must be launched to
rebuild the country’s crumbling infrastructure, provide decent housing
and schools, and provide well-paid, full-time jobs for the growing
number of unemployed.

Such a program should be paid for through a progressive taxation
system which shifts the burden from the working class to the ultra-
wealthy, and through the dismantling of the US war machine.

This perspective can be realized only through the independent
political mobilization of the American working class, in joint
struggle with working people throughout the world, aimed at the
establishment of a society based on social need, not profit and
private wealth accumulation. In the US, the first step is for the
working class to make a conscious break with the Democratic Party and
establish its own party to fight for a workers’ government.

This is the program advanced by the Socialist Equality Party. We
encourage all workers and youth to support the campaign of the SEP’s
presidential and vice presidential candidates, Jerry White and Bill
Van Auken, study our program and history, and make the decision to
join the SEP and help build it as the new mass party of the working
class.


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