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Rising benefits burden

GM has announced 25,000 layoffs, but other industries face similar cost burdens.

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Although GM is in the news now, in the past the legacy costs have bedeviled the steel industry. In 2001, Bethlehem Steel went into bankruptcy, throwing its pension commitments over to the PBGC. At the time, the industry said its $12 billion in legacy costs for 600,000 workers made it difficult to compete.

After it dumped its legacy costs, Bethlehem Steel, now part of the International Steel Group, became profitable. In mid-April, Mittal Steel Company, now one of the world's largest, acquired ISG for about $5 billion.

But the trouble in the auto industry is also spreading to the auto-parts suppliers, such as Delphi, which are also carrying significant pension and healthcare costs for young retirees. If these structural problems are not dealt with soon, production may move offshore, according to Edward Hill, professor of economic development at Cleveland State University's College of Urban Affairs. He cites Delphi's $150-per-hour manufacturing cost as opposed to China's $1-per-hour cost for auto parts.

"Auto-part production in the US is not only possible, but also competitive if the labor cost is some $15 to 25 per hour, with a contribution-based benefits plan, possibly coupled with a profit-sharing plan, with employees and retirees participating in copays on healthcare," Dr. Hill says. "I realize it's a political issue, but in terms of the economics of it, it's inevitable."

Delphi, for its part, has been consolidating manufacturing facilities. Since 1999, the company, a former subsidiary of GM, has closed 78 business lines or facilities. Last quarter, it cut its workforce by 1,500, part of a plan to shed 8,500 workers this year.

Some of the companies, including GM, maintain they are making progress on reducing some of their costs. On Tuesday, the chairman of General Motors, Rick Wagoner, said, "We've worked the healthcare topic hard for a long time, and from every angle." But, he added, "Frankly, the continuing double-digit US inflation in healthcare costs is swamping that progress."

The bottom line

In fact, per car, GM is now spending more on healthcare than it does on steel. "A startling number," says Neil Trautwein, assistant vice president for human-resources policy at the NAM. According to GM, its future healthcare costs for all its 1.1 million employees, retirees, and their dependents is $60 billion. The company now has 2-1/2 retirees for every active worker.

While costs may still be rising at double-digit levels at GM, they rose 7.5 percent last year for the 600,000 employers surveyed by Mercer Human Resources Consulting. This is the lowest increase since 1999. Behind the slowing costs, says Mercer, is more shopping for better prices by companies, continued efforts to get employees to pay more, and better management of people who are chronically ill. Companies are also planning to make changes once the Medicare prescription-drug benefit comes into full effect in 2006. "This will help GM and others," says Mr. Trautwein. "But it won't make the problems go away."

Anna Levine-Gronningsater contributed to this story.

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