The UAW says that troubles in the car industry are not its fault. According to the union, it was not a series of bad decisions by management either.
"This industry is in a crisis situation not of its own making," Ron Gettelfinger said in an interview Saturday afternoon with The Wall Street Journal (subscription required).
The statement is worth a bit of examination.
Gas prices have been historically low, well under $2 a gallon. The real spike is only a year old and the price per gallon is now back to $2 in many regions of the country. So, did a price pop which lasted three quarters of a year bring down The Big Three?
The other culprit Gettelfinger points to is the problems in the credit markets. Most consumers did not have trouble getting car loans as recent as this summer. Auto companies were offering zero percent financing and thousands of dollars in cash back Buying a car on credit was as easy as getting a subprime loan was three years ago.
The UAW did not ask for exorbitant wages and benefits over the last four decades. Management at the car companies did not rely on SUVs and pick-ups for profits even though they had seen the tremendous damage that the Arab Oil Embargo did to their finances in the 1970s.
In other words, no one involved in the car industry is to blame.
Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 24/7 Wall St.
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This is part of a weekly series about the car business. The auto industry plays an important role in the global economy, and record-high oil prices and a global slowdown have contributed to a crisis in the sector. This column will highlight some of the interesting stories that emerge as that crisis plays out.



