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He said GM plans to do more of its research and development as well as its engineering and design work, now largely centered in the U.S., in China. In particular, the company's advanced research center in Shanghai will focus on new energy vehicles and batteries, he said. GM recently unveiled its electric vehicle, the Chevrolet Volt. Akerson said the company learned painful but worthwhile lessons from its taxpayer funded bailout: chiefly to make sure it doesn't accrue debt. "The old GM was burdened with so much debt, they had to cut back on funding of new product, new research and development during the down cycle because they had such a heavy debt load. We're not going to make that mistake again," he said. The automaker's surging car sales in China have helped with the corporate rebound. GM's global sales grew 12 percent last year and it turned a $4.2 billion profit in the first nine months of 2010. Akerson predicted that the final quarter's results, which have yet to be released, will continue to show a "solid and profitable" year.
[Associated
Press;
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