Thursday, August 5, 2010

GM- Bankruptcy – Rising From the Dead?

GM filled for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on June 1st 2009 and has been emerging out of out that status ever since July 10th 2009.   Prior to this, GM was a king in the business world so to speak and had a history of being one of the wealthiest and largest companies in the country and world.  On the onset of General Motors bankruptcy, the United States government committed themselves to provide $30 million to the company in order for them to restructure themselves and compete with Asian auto makers who operate at a lower-cost.  Eventually, it ended up being a taxpayers undertaking of about $64 billion.  The timeline of GM’s bankruptcy proved to be eventful and costly to say the least.

Ever since rising from bankruptcy about a year ago, GM (which is owned by the U.S. government)  has either added or recalled 6,900 employees in the United States and posted first quarter profits of $865 million.  Of which, 1,100 of those jobs are located in Michigan.  The employment has bolted by even more in their Canadian facilities by 2,770 employees.

With the rise and fall of one of the greatest American companies, there are sure to be lessons learned.  Check out this insightful Wall Street Journal article by Paul Ingrassia on some of the lessons to be derived by the GM bankruptcy as a nation.

What do you think are some of the biggest lessons we could all derived from the GM bankruptcy?

No comments:

Post a Comment