Economy Headlines
| Bailing Out Chrysler Becoming a Bad Habit | | Print | |
| Written by Charles Scaliger | ||||
| Monday, 05 January 2009 15:31 | ||||
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Bailing out Chrysler is becoming a bad habit in Washington. Under the leadership of CEO Lee Iacocca, Chrysler sought and obtained a bailout during the Carter administration, an event that led to the near-canonization of Iacocca in corporate circles. The first Chrysler bailout also doubtless encouraged the notion that, should the U.S. automotive cartel get into financial hot water again, through improvident borrowing or the production of automobiles people refuse to buy, they can always return to Washington, hats in hand, for more taxpayer monies. See also "GM Bailout a Sop to Cerberus?"
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Ron Dodson
said:
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... I have cheese for your wine!!!! If you remember correctly 1. Chrysler paid the last loan back a few years ahead of schedule. 2. We were million's in the black before a hostle take over involed where the powers to be ran to Daimler to please partner with us, in which was a take over. Which bleed Chrylsr Dry. Billions now in the Red. Cerberus trying to stay a float. Bad timing for cerberus to run Chrysler. We were hosed Bring Back Lee Iacocca. |
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The federal government handouts to the auto industry continued over the weekend with the announcement of a $4 billion bridge loan to Chrysler LLC to help keep the Big Three automaker afloat. Chrysler, be it duly noted, is 81 percent owned by Cerberus Capital Management LP, one of the world's largest hedge funds, which has been inexplicably unwilling to use any of its own billions to help the troubled automotive giant.
