Youngstown News, Wall Street boosted by Bush's $17.4 billion auto bailout
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Wall Street boosted by Bush's $17.4 billion auto bailout


Published: Fri, December 19, 2008 @ 11:14 a.m.

NEW YORK (AP) — Wall Street advanced Friday, as investors cheered the government's pledge to lend as much as $17.4 billion to U.S. automakers, staving off possible bankruptcies that could have sent a debilitating blow to the economy and the labor market.

The decision to provide emergency help to carry the struggling industry into the new year comes after a $14 billion bailout for Detroit automakers failed to make it out of the Senate last week.

The companies' cash flows have been dwindling to a slow trickle due to the weak economy, slumping sales and tight credit.

The White House said it will let automakers draw $13.4 billion in short-term financing, and another $4 billion will be added later. It also set conditions the automakers must quickly meet.

"Allowing the auto companies to collapse is not a responsible course of action," President Bush said at a news conference Friday morning.

Investors have been especially concerned about the job market ramifications of a possible bankruptcy filing by an automaker like General Motors Corp. or Chrysler LLC, which some analysts said could result in as many as 3 million U.S. job losses. The government lost more than half a million jobs in November, and the Labor Department said Thursday that new claims for unemployment remained well above 500,000 last week. When unemployment rises, spending declines and credit deteriorates.


Comments

1ldchian(56 comments)posted 3 years, 1 month ago

see there. after all the arguing back and forth, between the politicians in washington and us on this site, greoge w. stepped in and did the only thing he could possibly have done to stave off the worst depression in eighty years.

but there are two things i wonder. did he do it so that history will not be written about him as being in charge when the economy crumbled? and does he even believe in his own financial policies in the first place? because earlier on he said he would never do exactly what he has just done.

either way, i'm glad.

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2scrooge(563 comments)posted 3 years, 1 month ago

I like the stipulation that wages must be brought in line with the import (non-union) manufacturers AND eliminate the rediculous job pool that pays the employee 95% of his wage for sitting on his a$$ at home.
Bravo for the bailout, and bravo for Dubya having the 'nads to force the union to step up and give concessions as well.
Hey UAW guys-something is better than not having a job at all.

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