Ailing Auto Industry Pays Workers for Not Working
March 25, 2006 -- Despite their unprecedented efforts to cut costs, American automakers are paying thousands of union workers to do nothing.
"They clock in, they sit there and they do their thing," said Daniel Howes, a business columnist for the Detroit News. "They read a book, play a game, watch soap operas or do whatever they do."
And then?
"They clock out and leave," Howes said.
It's called the jobs bank. It was invented 20 years ago, when the industry was expanding as a way to hold onto skilled workers until a new job opens up. But these days there are no new jobs.
"Most of us enjoy building cars, being productive, and there's just nowhere to go," said Linda Swan, a Ford employee.
In Michigan, General Motors reportedly is getting ready to cut hundreds of white collar workers from its ranks as early as next Tuesday. This week, the automaker announced it would offer more than 100,000 early retirement packages to hourly employees as part of a major restructuring plan.
But, that plan's impact on the jobs bank remains unclear.
$2 Billion Spent?
There are an estimated 15,000 workers in the jobs bank -- and that number has been growing with plant closings and layoffs at GM, Ford and auto parts maker, Delphi.
For every worker in the jobs bank, automakers spend up to $130,000 a year on wages, benefits and pensions -- a total of nearly $2 billion this year alone.
With contract talks between automakers and the union looming, the jobs bank clearly will be the subject of heated debate.
"I'm a skilled trade guy and if I get laid off, I go to a job bank and they call me back," one autoworker said. "If they get rid of it, I don't get called back."
This issue is so touchy that neither the union nor the automakers would talk to ABC News about it. Analysts say General Motors' new attrition program could thin the ranks of the jobs bank. But no one is sure by how many.
"The American auto industry is very sick at the moment," said Dale Jewett, a senior writer at Automotive News.
There is little question that dealing with the jobs bank will be part of the cure.
ABC News' Barbara Pinto reported this story for "World News Tonight."