Let car firms go bust, say majority of Americans: poll
10th April 2009, 9:00 WST
More than three-quarters of Americans think the government should let ailing carmakers General Motors or Chrysler go bankrupt instead of bailing out the firms, a newly-released poll says.
Seventy-six per cent of Americans think the federal government should let the automobile companies go bankrupt, according to the survey conducted by CNN
and the Opinion Research Corporation and released on Thursday.
The government has pumped billions of dollars into GM and Chrysler in recent months in a bid to keep the car giants afloat.
President Barack Obama has warned however that the two firms could still face bankruptcy if they do not come up with viable plans to return to profitability.
Since the automobile crisis became headline news late last year, the poll found the number of Americans who think the US economy would face a major crisis if the car firms go bankrupt has declined.
In December, 66 per cent of those surveyed said they thought the companies were too big to let fail, compared to 47 per cent now. A majority, 55 per cent, said they thought they wouldn’t face any problems at all in their own lives if the carmakers went bust.
Only 37 per cent of Americans said they would purchase a car from a bankrupt company, although the figure jumped to 57 per cent if the government were to promise to stand behind the cars’ warranty.
The survey, conducted between April 3-5, interviewed 1,023 Americans by telephone and has a margin of error of plus or minus three percentage points.
GM and Chrysler have received a combined $US17.4 billion ($A24.57 billion) in public aid since December, and are still on the verge of collapse as the world’s largest economy suffers its second year of recession.
The Obama administration has demanded they submit viable restructuring plans before further aid will be considered.