“In a reset economy, the government will be a regulator; and also an industry policy champion, a financier, and a key partner.” (Jeff Immelt, GE 2008 Annual Report, quoted here)
“What else can be said about how a destructive management philosophy–long warned against by classical liberals–drove a once iconic American company into the bog? Contra-capitalism destroys wealth, not only capitalism.” (below)
A May 27, 2020, piece at EnergyWire (E&E News) reported the latest of how errant leadership, political correctness, and cronyism diminished a once proud, iconic company.
“General Electric Co. cut one of the last remaining links to founder Thomas Edison, as the beleaguered manufacturer wrapped up a three-year process to sell its iconic lightbulb business,” reported Rick Clough. The buyer was the automated ‘smart home’ firm Savant Systems Inc.
Clough continued:
While lighting has become a minor part of GE’s operations, the sale is symbolic for a company that has shed elements of its past as it grappled with dwindling cash and slowing demand. GE in recent years sold its century-old locomotive unit and backed away from some health-care and oil businesses.
Boston-based GE sold its home appliance unit in 2016, although “GE Appliances” remains its brand name; Savant will keep the brand name with its lighting purchase as well.
“For nearly 130 years,” a joint company press release stated, “GE Lighting has been at the forefront of every major lighting innovation, from the dawn of incandescent bulbs to industry-first LED and smart solutions along with the world’s first voice-embedded lighting product.”
But the future could not be grasped by GE in its core area, a sad reflection of its recent history of diversification and entry into crony industries (such as buying Enron Wind Company in 2002).
GE’s new CEO Larry Culp has had a a lot to correct and rationalize after taking over for Jeffrey Immelt, a notoriously bad 16-year leader in the contra-capitalist league of Enron’s Ken Lay , Duke Energy’s James E. Rogers, and BP’s John Browne. Political correctness, cronyism inside and outside of the firm, false ego, and a lack of focus marked these members of the business Hall of Shame.
Maize on Immelt
Green energy, which competed against GE’s core gas turbines business, caught Kennedy Maize’s attention in his early-2010 piece, “Is GE’s Immelt Headed Out the Door? (Power magazine):
[Jeffrey] Immelt has made big bets on alleged green technologies, particularly wind, as GE has become one of the largest wind developers in the world. As former Enron employee Rob Bradley notes in his MasterResource blog, Enron bought a floundering Zond Corp. wind business in 1997, failed to generate a profit from it, despite persuading Texas to adopt a very wind-favorable renewables standard, and sold the business to GE in 2002, under Immelt’s leadership.
Political Capitalist
Timothy Carney at AEI recalled the story of Immelt ruthlessly closing down the Winchester Lamp Plant in Virginia because of upcoming federal regulations setting tougher energy efficiency standards. Immelt made it all come true by working to make those regulations become law in 2007, thinking that his company could increase margins with a new slate of products. That, and a lot of other things that Immelt did, did not work out.
Carney nailed the sins of a political capitalist losing at the government trough.
Immelt’s game was cozying up to government. It wasn’t just about being a government contractor or trying to master the complex tax code. GE invested in businesses and technologies that depended for profits on mandates, regulations, tax credits and handouts and then invested in lobbyists to ensure those favorable policies. Immelt was a political entrepreneur from start to finish.
In 2005, Immelt created “EcoMagination,” a venture that would try to find ways to profit off green energy and similar ideas. When former President George W. Bush in his 2007 State of the Union address laid out eight technologies he wanted to subsidize, at least seven of them — including “clean coal” — were GE specialties.
Then came the Wall Street bailouts and Obamanomics, which Immelt said marked a “reset” of capitalism. “The interaction between government and business will change forever,” Immelt wrote in the 2009 annual report. “In a reset economy, the government will be a regulator; and also an industry policy champion, a financier, and a key partner.”
Conclusion
Immelt was an Obama favorite, not unlike the Clinton/Gore pet Ken Lay. The politicians welcomed the cronies weakening capitalism from within.
What else can be said about how a destructive management philosophy–long warned against by classical liberals–drove a once iconic American company into the bog? Contra-capitalism destroys not just capitalism as a system but wealth itself.
The real culprit was Jack Welch whose rampant use of financial chicanery (aided and abetted by a complicit gang of Wall Street and media sycophants) established the culture of intellectual dishonesty that incubated the likes of Jeff Immelt.
Jack Welch was an outstanding leader who made a mistake when he picked Immelt.
Jack supported innovation and meritocracy. I was at the GM meeting where Jack established his basic strategy: Be number one or two in your industry.
This was a sound strategy that put the focus where it should be in a large diversified business.
GECC was a well run financial group until Immelt became CEO. His purchase of UK mortgage paper was a disaster. When he bought Amersham he left the leadership in the UK, rather than in Milwaukee where the core business was located. He sold the chemical business just before natural gas became cheap in the US. He bought Alstom, a French Company, which anyone with any sense would never do because of Frances ridiculous employment laws. He flew around in his company jet, but another jet followed him. How ridiculous was that? He owes a lot of money to GE stock holders.
The list goes on and on until GE almost failed and Culp became CEO.
Thank you Donn! You were an insider of sorts. Please post more on the sad Immelt saga.
Sorry, Mr. Dears, but Welch “gamed” GAAP using GECC. While legal in the strict sense, it was accounting thimblerigging.
Stock option-fueled sycophancy and Wall Street’s usual ability to look the other way (as long as the stock went up and corporate finance business was to be had) permitted the chicanery to continue until there weren’t any more rabbits left in the hat.
GECC was where the rabbits (and the pimples) were hidden from view.
Immelt was groomed in the “GE way” and completed the job of nearly wrecking GE with the stupid Alstom acquisition.
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