Foreign Policy Blogs

A British Lesson on Auto Bailouts

Nelson D. Schwartz of the New York Times uses an example from the sorry history of the British motor industry to warn that auto bailouts, currently a hot topic in the United States, may not necessarily bring about the desired results. As a parallel with General Motors, Ford and Chrysler, Schwartz describes the once-mighty British Leyland as a faltering auto giant "whose brands were synonymous with the open road," with hundreds of thousands of unionized workers and powerful political backers. After pleading for a virtual blank check from the government, British Leyland went through £11 billion of inflation-adjusted British taxpayer money, or $16.5 billion, in the 1970s and 1980s before going out of business. All that is left of the company now are memories of cars like the Triumph, and a painful lesson in the limited effectiveness of bailouts.

A British Lesson Auto Bailouts

November 17, 2008, The New York Times