Journal Pioneer

More about tactics than the balance sheet

GM job cuts, closures not a symptom of Trump’s trade agenda, analysts say

- BY JAMES MCCARTEN

Donald Trump’s tariff battles with Canada, Mexico, China and Europe have inflated the cost of steel, making it more expensive to build cars in North America, but General Motors’ decision to close factories and lay off thousands of people is more about tactics than the balance sheet, say trade observers and automotive industry experts.

“It’s very understand­able, given all the hype associated with the trade agreement, and, you might say, the troubled relationsh­ip between your prime minister and our president, that it’s some sort of reaction to the tariffs on steel and aluminum,” said Michigan business professor Marick Masters. “But I think it’s more of a strategic adjustment by General Motors to prepare itself for a future in which it’s trying to get ahead of the technology curve.” The company is placing a substantia­l bet on a future dominated by three high-tech trends that have been upending the world of the internal-combustion engine: electric vehicles, mobility services like ride-hailing apps, and cars and trucks that are capable of driving themselves.

And they’re doing it at a time of relative economic health, a departure from the traditiona­l peak-and-trough timelines that tend to predict waves of deep, widespread job cuts, said Maryann Keller, a New York-based automotive-industry consultant. As unmistakab­le as the coming future is, it’s still a relatively long way off for an industry that still manages to sell more than 19 million vehicles in North America each year.

“It’s unusual for a company in this kind of market to make announceme­nts where they are essentiall­y shedding capacity. I think that is a pretty profound statement from GM that they choose to do it at this time,” Keller said. “If they’re in a race, General Motors is running way ahead of the pack. They may run way ahead of the pack and run off a cliff, because nobody can see the future that clearly, but they have defined it and they are preparing for it.”

When news emerged late Sunday that the company was planning to shut down its flagship Canadian plant in Oshawa, Ont., putting more than 2,500 people out of work, social media set its sights on Trump’s “America First” strategy for bringing manufactur­ing jobs back to U.S. soil.

But that argument all but evaporated Monday when the company announced that as part of its plan to save US$6 billion by the year 2020, it was also shutting down production at four other U.S. plants - several of them deep in Rust Belt states that helped elevate Trump to the presidency in 2016.

“The U.S. got hit harder than we did,” said one Canadian government insider. “This is about a global restructur­ing in the industry towards electric and (artificial intelligen­ce)-driven autonomous vehicles.”

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? The Oshawa’s General Motors car assembly plant in Oshawa, Ont., Monday.
CP PHOTO The Oshawa’s General Motors car assembly plant in Oshawa, Ont., Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada