Comodo Motors General Manager Jordan Baker joins ‘The Big Money Show’ to discuss the impact on auto dealers and car buyers from the ongoing UAW strike.
The United Auto Workers strike against Detroit's Big Three continues to hit production at the automakers, leading Ford, General Motors and Stellantis to each lay off more workers this week.
GM on Monday announced additional layoffs of nearly 200 workers, while Stellantis and Ford reported cuts of another 570 and 70 employees, respectively, as the limited strike entered its fourth week.
Striking UAW workers picket outside a Stellantis factory in Center Line, Mich., Sept. 22, 2023. (REUTERS/Dieu-Nalio Chery/File Photo / Reuters Photos)
Stellantis NV
Total strike-related layoffs have now reached around 2,300 at GM, which has been hardest hit by the strike. Ford has laid off a total of 1,865 workers since the strike began, and Stellantis has laid off 640.
GENERAL MOTORS REACHES TENTATIVE AGREEMENT WITH CANADIAN UNION, ENDING STRIKE
General Motors Co.
Around 25,000 of the 150,000 UAW members employed by the Big Three are on strike, but shutdowns at critical assembly plants is eliminating work at other factories, contributing to the layoffs.
Workers put engines on frames of fuel-powered F-150 trucks at Ford's Truck Plant in Dearborn, Mich., Sept. 20, 2022. (Jeff Kowalsky/AFP via Getty Images / Getty Images)
Ford Motor Co.
‘STRIKETOBER’ RETURNS WITH VENGEANCE
The strike is also prompting layoffs at suppliers and in related industries.
According to Michigan economic consulting firm Anderson Economic Group (AEG), the UAW's strike has already cost the U.S. economy more than any other auto industry strike this century.
AEG reported Monday that losses from the union's strike
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