General Motors postpones restart of production due to not being able to pay for imports

General Motors postpones restart of production due to not being able to pay for imports

Despite the fact that with the new government the import regime was made more flexible and the first releases of dollars by the central bank to pay foreign suppliers, the situation of the industries remains delicate for the supply of imported parts and inputs due to the debt accumulated throughout 2023 in foreign trade.

The automotive sector is one of the most affected and last year suffered constant production interruptions due to supply cuts by international express companies that refused to continue sending products due to non-payment.

The end-of-year break and the holiday period caused an impasse in this problem, but the restart of activity comes with complications.

General Motors will postpone the restart of activity due to payment difficulties to foreign suppliers.

The automaker based in the province of Santa Fe planned to resume activity starting Monday the 29th of this month. He had gone on vacation at the end of the year. However, the return to production will be delayed for this reason.

The restart date has not yet been defined, although, according to Ámbito, the inactivity would continue for one or two weeks.

If it were for a week, the labor solution would be channeled through the advancement of the winter vacation period. That is what would be communicated to the workers, since they would have to sign that agreement.

On the other hand, for a longer period of time, a suspension scheme would have to be entered. That is what the company is negotiating with the SMATA union. At the moment there is no agreement.

The General Motors plant now produces only one model: the Tracker SUV. Until the end of the year, the Cruze was also manufactured, but it was discontinued due to the end of the model’s life.

In the latter part of last year, General Motors closed for three weeks for this reason: foreign suppliers cut off merchandise shipments due to the debt accumulated from imports.

The former Minister of Economy, Sergio Massa, had ordered that the terminals and auto parts companies finance themselves on their own with the promise that, within a certain period, the Central Bank would deliver the dollars at the official value to cancel those debts.

However, the payment term was always changing and left his administration with an accumulation of debt for the sector that exceeds US$8,000 million.

The government of Javier Milei proposed a bond (Bopreal) to pay this debt over a period of four years, but the many companies abroad do not accept this system and demand the immediate cancellation of that debt to continue supplying.

This is the problem facing General Motors. There are also other automotive companies with difficulties in normalizing supply.

For example, the automotive company Renault would have several local suppliers with problems producing because of the refusal of foreign companies to continue sending supplies. The Córdoba plant – where Nissan’s Frontier pickup is also manufactured – plans to resume production on Monday.

Toyota accepted Bopreal to be able to decompress the debt it has abroad. Another automaker would follow the same path.

The situation is different with the new imports that began to be made from the new government since there is a payment schedule system that began to be carried out this week and the first importers already received dollars at the official value to cancel the new purchases.

Source: Ambito

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