From CBS  News.com:
 
If you've been following the auto industry's  crisis, then you've probably read or heard a lot about overpaid American  autoworkers--in particular, the fact that the average hourly employee  of the Big Three makes $70 per hour.
That's an awful lot of money. Seventy  dollars an hour in wages works out to almost $150,000 a year in gross  income, if you assume a forty-hour work week. Is it any wonder the Big  Three are in trouble? And with autoworkers making so much, why should  taxpayers--many of which make far less--finance a plan to bail them  out?
Well, here's one reason: The figure is  wildly misleading.
Let's start with the fact that it's not  $70 per hour in wages. According to Kristin Dziczek of the Center for  Automative Research--who was my primary source for the figures you are  about to read--average wages for workers at Chrysler, Ford, and General  Motors were just $28 per hour as of 2007. That works out to a little  less than $60,000 a year in gross income--hardly outrageous, particularly  when you consider the physical demands of automobile assembly work and  the skills most workers must acquire over the course of their careers.
 
More important, and contrary to what  you may have heard, the wages aren't that much bigger than what Honda,  Toyota, and other foreign manufacturers pay employees in their U.S.  factories. While we can't be sure precisely how much those workers make,  because the companies don't make the information public, the best estimates  suggests the corresponding 2007 figure for these "transplants"--as  the foreign-owned factories are known--was somewhere between $20 and  $26 per hour, and most likely around $24 or $25. That would put average  worker's annual salary at $52,000 a year.
So the "wage gap," per se,  has been a lot smaller than you've heard. And this is no accident. If  the transplants paid their employees far less than what the Big Three  pay their unionized workers, the United Auto Workers would have a much  better shot of organizing the transplants' factories. Those factories  remain non-unionized and management very much wants to keep it that  way.
But then what's the source of that $70  hourly figure? It didn't come out of thin air. Analysts came up with  it by including the cost of all employer-provided benefits--namely,  health insurance and pensions--and then dividing by the number of workers.  The result, they found, was that benefits for Big Three cost about $42  per hour, per employee. Add that to the wages--again, $28 per hour--and  you get the $70 figure. Voila.
Except ... notice something weird about  this calculation? It's not as if each active worker is getting health  benefits and pensions worth $42 per hour. That would come to nearly  twice his or her wages. (Talk about gold-plated coverage!) Instead,  each active worker is getting benefits equal only to a fraction of that--probably  around $10 per hour, according to estimates from the International Motor  Vehicle Program. The number only gets to $70 an hour if you include  the cost of benefits for retirees--in other words, the cost of benefits  for other people. One of the few people to grasp this was Portfolio.com's  Felix Salmon. As he noted Friday, the claim that workers are getting  $70 an hour in compensation is just "not true."
 
Of course, the cost of benefits for those  retirees--you may have heard people refer to them as "legacy costs"--do  represent an extra cost burden that only the Big Three shoulder. And,  yes, it makes it difficult for the Big Three to compete with foreign-owned  automakers that don't have to pay the same costs. But don't forget why  those costs are so high. While the transplants don't offer the same  kind of benefits that the Big Three do, the main reason for their present  cost advantage is that they just don't have many retirees.
 
