The Treasury exited GM more than four years after the maker's 2009 bankruptcy.

The U.S. government lost less than $10 billion rescuing the auto industry, which was four times less than some estimates.

The Treasury initially estimated the loss would be $44 billion, but revised it to $30 billion in 2009. Under government accounting rules, the U.S. Treasury actually lost $16.56 billion on paper because interest and dividends paid isn’t applied toward the principal owed.

The government was repaid through a combination of stock sales, partial loan repayments, dividends and interest payments.

The biggest bath was taken on the deal with General Motors by putting up $49.5 billion, but recovering just $39 billion after the loans were repaid and stock sold. It fared better with GM’s former financing arm, GMAC, which is now known as Ally. The company was given $17.2 billion, but the government recouped $19.6 billion: a $2.4 billion profit.

With its help for Chrysler, it suffered a small loss: $11.96 given versus $10.67 returned. The losses were all on the stocks the government received as part of the deal. Overall, the government gave $79.69 billion to the industry to help it recover, but collected $70.43 billion, according to the Treasury’s report.

However, many called the money an investment in saving the country’s economy. Many experts predicted that the entire auto industry would collapse if GM and Chrysler had been allowed to simply collapse.

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A December 2013 study said failure of GM alone would have killed 1.2 million U.S. jobs, cut personal income by $79.5 billion and eliminated $17 billion in income taxes and Social Security taxes in 2009, according to the Detroit News.

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It could have also boosted government spending by $6.5 billion. Those figured do not take into account the impact the pensions from those two companies alone would have had on the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp., the government entity that insures pensions.

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Overall, the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), which is the deal that helped rescue GM and Chrysler, as well as dozens of banks and an insurance company, will make money overall. Treasury Secretary Jack Lew told reporters before Christmas, according to the News, the government invested $426.4 billion and recovered $441.7 billion.

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