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Retiring General Motors CEO Dan Akerson says the government bailout of his company was a net gain for taxpayers - even though they lost $10.5 billion in the deal.

Akerson says if GM had gone under, taxpayers would have had to pick up pension plans with a $26 billion shortfall, and the government would have lost billions in tax revenue and would have had to make benefit payments such as unemployment compensation.

He cited a report released last week by the Center for Automotive Research, an Ann Arbor, Mich., research firm, that said if the government had not intervened, nearly 1.9 million jobs would have been lost in 2009 and 2010. Federal and state governments also would have lost $39.4 billion in tax revenue and payments made for unemployment benefits and food stamps, the study said.

GM won't repay the $10.5 billion, Akerson said, because the government agreed to make loans and take company stock in exchange for the $49.5 billion bailout in 2008 and 2009. The government sold the last of its General Motors Co. stock on Dec. 9.

"We paid back all that we owed and someone took an equity position in us," he said of the government.



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SAY WHAT? Retiring CEO Implies Taxpayers Should Be Thankful For GM Bailout

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