U.S. automaker General Motors Co. has tapped Chris Liddell, chief financial officer of Microsoft Corp., to be its new vice chairman and chief financial officer, the company said Monday.
+ACI-Chris will lead our financial and accounting operations on a global basis and will report directly to me. We're also looking to his
experience and insights in corporate strategy as a member of the senior leadership team in helping our restructuring efforts,+ACI- GM Chairman and CEO Ed Whitacre said.
According to a Detroit News report, Liddell replaces Ray Young, who last week was named vice president of international operations. The Obama
administration had been very critical of how GM's financial operations were managed. The automaker had been looking for a new CFO for several months.
Liddell's appointment comes less than two weeks after Whitacre ousted former CEO Fritz Henderson and made several key management changes that gave more responsibility to younger executives and moved women into important roles running GM's sales and marketing operation, as well as manufacturing and labor relations.
Liddell, 51, has been the CFO of Microsoft Corp. since 2005. He will leave Microsoft on Dec. 31 and assume his new responsibilities at GM in the
new year. Before Microsoft, Liddell was CFO of International Paper Co., the world's largest forest products company. He also has investment banking
experience and was a member of the Securities and Exchange Commission's Advisory Committee on Improvements to Financial Reporting.