agent Entrepreneur logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Treasury Defends Plan to Make Banks Pay for Auto Bailout Losses

May 5, 2010
3 min to read


WASHINGTON - The nation's banks told the Senate Finance Committee that it is unfair to make them pay for taxpayer losses on the automotive bailout. The Obama administration and some congressional Democrats want to impose a new fee or tax on the nation's largest financial institutions to cover any losses from the $700 billion Wall Street and auto bailout fund known as the Troubled Asset Relief Program, The Detroit News reported. The auto industry has received an $85 billion bailout, and the administration's most recent estimate says it expects to lose $28 billion. But the Treasury Department will update that estimate later this month. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner also defended the government's proposal. "Banks should pay for the cost of bank failures -- not taxpayers," Geithner testified. General Motors Co. and Chrysler Group have received about $62 billion in government bailouts. If taxpayers lost money on either investment, banks would be required to make up those losses. Geithner says GM and Chrysler shouldn't be covered by the fee because they have already been restructured in bankruptcy. "The auto companies are a different case," Geithner said. "Despite the many mistakes they made over time managing those businesses, they did not cause this financial crisis. Their challenges were made substantially worse by this financial crisis." He said Treasury didn't think "it was necessary or appropriate" to apply the tax to the automakers. Geithner said GM and Chrysler are in a "much stronger position today than any of us expected." But the new tax would apply to Detroit-based GMAC Inc., Geithner said. GMAC, which will be renamed Ally Bank next week, has received a $17.2 billion bailout and is 56.3 percent owned by the U.S. Treasury. The Obama administration said the new tax would raise $90 billion over 10 years. "We question why the financial industry should be asked to pay for TARP losses attributable to other industries," said Steve Bartlett, president and CEO of the Financial Services Roundtable. James Chessen, chief economist for the American Bankers Association, testified that if the TARP program had been limited to financial institutions, "there would be no losses." He said it was "unfair" for banks to have to cover the losses of automakers. Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, questioned why banks that didn't receive government bailouts are also covered. He said the tax wouldn't be fair because it would not cover GM, Chrysler and Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, a harsh critic of GM's recent advertisements that touted its repayment of $6.7 billion in loans, asked Geithner why GM isn't returning unused government bailout funds that had been in escrow. On April 21, the Treasury gave GM unrestricted use of $6.6 billion in unused government bailout funds. "Why shouldn't GM return the funds to the U.S. government?" Grassley asked. Grassley and other Republicans have been angry that GM hasn't emphasized that the Treasury Department swapped $43 billion in loans for a 61 percent majority equity stake in GM. Grassley and others have criticized GM ads that featured GM CEO Edward Whitacre Jr.; the ads stopped running last week. A conservative think tank, the Competitive Enterprise Institute, filed a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission over the ads today, asking the agency to investigate. GM has defended the ads and even Grassley has acknowledged they were "technically accurate." Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Lansing, said the automakers shouldn't be covered by the new fee. Automakers were hurt by the frozen credit markets and didn't engage in reckless behavior as banks did, Stabenow said. She called it "apples to oranges" to apply the fee to automakers.

More Industry

Photo of Cadillac Lyriq SUV on road with partly cloudy sky in background
Industryby Hannah MitchellApril 16, 2026

Used Autos Selling for More

A recent price spike due to several larger market forces, though it hasn’t dulled demand, is pushing more consumers to efficient models to squeeze in buys.

Read More →
Photo of facade of Waldorf Toyota car dealership
Industryby Hannah MitchellApril 16, 2026

Maryland Auto Group Sells

A group out West picked up the major D.C.-area collection, putting it in the upper tiers of private automotive groups in the U.S.

Read More →
Line graphic showing Cox Automotive's March Credit Availability Index status
Industryby Hannah MitchellApril 13, 2026

Auto Lending Opens Up in March

Lenders loosened access for subprime borrowers, and consumers with negative equity reached a record high, Cox Automotive reported.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
electric vehicle next to an urban charging station. EV Demand Diverges. F&I and Showroom logo
Industryby Lauren LawrenceApril 10, 2026

EV Interest Varies Regionally

U.S. consumer interest in electric vehicles lags behind other countries despite the rising gas prices caused by the ongoing war in the Middle East.

Read More →
Photo of the rear of a Mercedes GLC 400 electric SUV with a skyline in the background
Industryby Hannah MitchellApril 10, 2026

Brands Weighed on Projected Recalls

Research reveals the brands and models most likely to have higher recall rates over their lifetimes. While some brands rank high, addressing safety issues can be a selling point.

Read More →
Photo of white 2026 Ford Bronco on a sandy beach
Industryby Hannah MitchellApril 10, 2026

March New-Vehicle Sales Don’t Reflect War

Cox Automotive data shows Americans doubled down on big-is-better despite price increases. Slightly higher incentives helped fuel the demand.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Photo of several cars on lifts in a service center
Industryby Hannah MitchellApril 9, 2026

Franchised Dealers Stand to Gain Service Business

Cox Automotive research shows both the opportunities and the challenges in turning consumers’ growing affordability needs into increased fixed-operations revenue.

Read More →
Photo of office desk with open laptop on it and an empty chair next to it
IndustryApril 9, 2026

What Matters Most in Building Your Agency

The partner you choose for growth and expansion is key, because better is the ultimate goal instead of growth for growth’s sake.

Read More →
car with hood open, an arm holding a wrench, The most loyal generation text, Agent Entrepreneur logo
Industryby Lauren LawrenceApril 9, 2026

Service Drives Gen Z Loyalty

The dealership profit center plays an important role in customer retention, and generation Z customers are showing the highest loyalty rates, based on recent CDK Global data.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Photo of man with most of his face hidden as he types on a computer keyboard
Industryby Hannah MitchellApril 2, 2026

Fake Auto Dealer Websites Frauding Consumers

The Point Predictive study traced a pattern across more than 100 websites it believes are being developed by an international theft ring.

Read More →