| Combined,
GM, Ford and the DaimlerChrysler AG's Chrysler Group estimate
they spent $9.9 billion in 2003 to provide health care to
nearly 2 million workers, pensioners and dependents, reports
Jeffrey McCracken in the Detroit Free Press.
GM
had the biggest healthcare costs in 2003 by far at $4.8 billion
and expects that to grow about 8% to $5.1 billion this year.
Overall, the health costs faced by Ford, GM and Chrysler are
rising from 8% to 12% a year.
The
figures were aired at a seminar during this year’s annual
Management Briefings at Traverse City, Michigan, where the
theme was "surviving the perfect storm," and health
care was frequently cited as the one of the US automotive
industry’s highest risk factors.
According
to Mark Finucane, a speaker at the conference who oversees
Ernst & Young's US health care practice, "Health
care threatens the long-term future of the auto industry,
if not all manufacturers in America." He and others noted
GM and its two Detroit rivals spend more on health care than
they do on steel, at GM on average about $1,400 per vehicle,
according to various studies, versus about $650-$700 for steel
per vehicle.
Rising
health-care costs are blamed for everything from why Wall
Street doesn't want to invest in auto-related stocks to why
domestic automakers cheapen their interiors with more plastic
than foreign rivals.
In
one session, Michigan's director of economic development,
David Hollister, blamed rising health-care costs for hurting
funding for vocational and higher education, thereby jeopardizing
the state's ability to offer educated workers to automakers
and suppliers.
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