The decline and fall of General Electric, the poster
child of Obamanomics, by Timothy
P. Carney 1/23/18, Examiner
Sometimes we look back a decade or
so and reconsider our word choice. For instance, I used to call General
Electric — with its heavy lobbying, its intimate ties to the White House, all
its bets on green energy, on embryonic stem cells, on Obamacare, on industrial
policy, the “for-profit arm of the Obama administration.” Those words were
ill-chosen. Specifically, in describing GE, it was a mistake to use the word
“profit.”
No company has spent as much on U.S.
lobbying since 2000 as General Electric. And no component of the Dow Jones
Industrial Average has performed worse since 2000 than General Electric.
The company’s stock is tanking. Its
profit margins range from sclerotic to negative. Its recent big bets on Europe
and green energy are proving to be duds. GE has already sold off its appliance
business and is trying to find a buyer for its light bulb business.
That’s not enough, according to some
major investors, one of whom has called for
a full breakup of GE. It’s a sad state for a company that has represented
industrial strength for more than a century. It’s also a telling epigraph for
Obamanomics.
GE CEO Jeff Immelt kicked off the
start of former President Barack Obama's administration with a letter
prophesying a golden era of American industrial planning, ushered in by the
bailouts and a new president who promised a “remaking” of America.
In a letter praising the Federal
Reserve, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Treasury, “and global
governments,” plus “stimulus programs being implemented around the world [that]
will provide trillions in new investments,”
Immelt foresaw that the “global
economy, and capitalism, will be 'reset' in several important ways.”
Specifically, “In a reset economy, the government will be a regulator; and also an industry policy champion, a financier, and a
key partner.”
The letter bragged, “We have gained
access to government funding programs that put us on equal footing with banks,”
and described GE as “ a natural partner” with federal agencies, “as the role of
government increases in the current crisis.” GE is “a particularly desirable
partner for governments,” Immelt assured shareholders.
Whenever the Obama administration
introduced a major policy initiative, GE was there hopping on board, looking to
be the government’s partner. When Obama created a “Jobs Council,” his jobs czar was Immelt.
When Obama in Spring 2009 announced
big money for “Building a new system of high-speed rail in America,” GE hopped
on board the train. “We are ready to partner with the federal government and
Amtrak to make high-speed rail a reality,” GE declared at an event in May 2009.
GE’s top rail lobbyist was Linda Daschle, wife of Obama mentor and former
Senate Democratic Leader Tom Daschle of South Dakota.
In July 2009, Obama opened the
spigots of federal funding for research on embryonic stem cells. That same
week, GE had announced that GE Healthcare and embryonic stem-cell giant Geron
"have entered into a global exclusive license and alliance agreement to
develop and commercialize cellular assay products derived from human embryonic
stem cells (hESCs) for use in drug discovery, development and toxicity
screening."
Two months later, Obama announced a
concession to Russia: He would scrap U.S. plans to build a missile shield in
Eastern Europe. Reuters reported, "Shortly after the pullback on the
shield programme was announced, Russia's government said Prime Minister Vladimir
Putin would meet several U.S. executives on Friday from firms including General
Electric.”
Obama had campaigned on outlawing
the incandescent light bulb, and he implemented regulations that effectively
did that (under a law signed by former President George W. Bush). GE had
lobbied for that law, supported Obama’s implementation of it, and expected to
profit by forcing consumers to buy high-tech, higher-margin bulbs.
GE lobbied for and was expected to
profit from Obama’s green-energy subsidies and regulations, which would enrich
the conglomerate's many renewable products, including wind turbines. Obama was
a tireless champion of export subsidies, of which GE was a top recipient.
Heck, in 2013, GE actually became
officially “Too Big to Fail,” designated by the Financial Stability Oversight
Council as TBTF. “Material financial distress at GECC could pose a threat to
U.S. financial stability,” FSOC determined.
And yet, here we are. GE opened at
$29.37 a share on Election
Day, when the Dow was at 18,332.43. On
Tuesday Jan. 23, GE closed at $16.30 (down about 45 percent), whereas the Dow
closed at 26,210.81, up about 42 percent. The new CEO, John Flannery, has said
he’s open to a breakup.
There are countless explanations for
GE’s collapse, but here’s one: GE spent a decade chasing the shiniest new
winner picked by government, instead of looking for lasting value as dictated
by the market. Government can provide billions in stimulus and maybe even some
regulatory protection from your competition, but it can’t create wealth or
provide lasting value.
For all the hopeful talk of a
post-bailout reset of capitalism in favor of the politically connected, it
turns out that basic economics trumped Obamanomics after all.
http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/the-decline-and-fall-of-general-electric-the-poster-child-of-obamanomics/article/2646900
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