US Auto Suppliers to Get US$5 Bln from Gov't
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The US government plans to provide US$5 billion to financially troubled auto suppliers who are linked to the nation's three biggest automakers, a latest effort to help stabilize the auto industry.
The money comes from the Obama administration's Troubled Assets Relief Program, or TARP, officials with knowledge of the plan was quoted as saying on Thursday by news reports.
Under the plan, a financing facility would be created by the administration to provide funding for auto parts that large suppliers shipped to the automakers but have not been paid for.
Auto suppliers have been in a cash crunch as automakers are shutting down plants and reducing costs, struggling to survive.
Because of the financial crisis and economic recession, US automakers have been battered by a collapse of auto sales here and abroad.
GM and Chrysler, two of US "Big Three" automakers, have received a combined US$17.4 billion of emergency loans from the government to stave off bankruptcy.
They requested for an additional US$21.6 billion in government aid last month.
The third automaker, Ford, has said that it has enough cash to survive the downturn without government aid.
(Xinhua News Agency March 20, 2009)