Pundits Peddle Revisionism in Attacking U.S. Automakers

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By Warren Brown
Sunday, November 23, 2008

The Mob of Pundits (MOP) is out to lynch the domestic automobile industry.

MOP members, many of them compensated substantially more than the $71,000 annually in wages and benefits paid to United Auto Workers union-represented employees, are much in favor of hanging GM, Ford and Chrysler from the nearest bankruptcy tree.

It is a fate deserved by the American car companies, according to MOP leaders Thomas L. Friedman of The New York Times and George F. Will, a conservative columnist, whose stuff frequently appears on the op-ed pages of The Washington Post.

"Few companies more deserve failure," said commentator Michael Gerson, oddly arguing in a Washington Post op-ed column last week that General Motors should be allowed to collapse, but that the consequences of such a failure would do grave harm to the American economy.

According to the MOP crowd, American car companies have messed up -- making too many trucks and sport-utility vehicles, ignoring consumer and governmental demands for more fuel-efficient vehicles and, as Will stated in a column last week, entering "improvident labor contracts" with the UAW.

It's baloney.

Americans went truck crazy in the 1990s and in the early years of this century, making light trucks more than 50 percent of new vehicles annually sold in this country, for the same reason they are in danger of re-embracing that madness -- cheap gasoline. They were enabled by lawmakers who, with one hand, pushed car companies to increase technical fuel efficiency while using the other to give American consumers the least-expensive gasoline in the developed world.

Increased technical fuel efficiency plus low-cost gasoline fueled consumer demand for more driving and bigger and more powerful vehicles with which to do that driving. Gasoline consumption in the United States soared . . . until high fuel prices restored some sanity to the U.S. consumer automotive market.

The MOP crowd blames American car companies for causing truck mania. It is a faulty allegation. Car companies follow market demand much more than they generate it. Nearly all automobile manufacturers doing business in the United States aggressively pursued the truck market, offering some version of a pickup truck (Honda Ridgeline, Nissan Titan, Toyota Tundra) or some kind of SUV (Mercedes-Benz M-Class, BMW X-Class, Toyota Land Cruiser, Nissan Pathfinder).

In a cheap-gas economy, trucks and big engines made big money for everybody. Were GM, Ford and Chrysler supposed to sacrifice that market in favor of fuel-sippers, which, before high fuel prices in the summers of 2007 and 2008, barely constituted 4 percent of new U.S. vehicle sales?

The MOP brigade says American car companies should have seen high fuel prices coming. If that's true, what about Toyota, which chose to introduce a revamped, super-sized, fuel-consumptive version of its Tundra pickup this year just as gasoline prices were spiking? New Tundra sales tanked as a result, forcing Toyota to curtail production of that model.

Ah, the critics say, but look at that fuel-efficient, gas-electric Toyota Prius hybrid.


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