About 5,000 General Motors Co salaried workers took buyouts to leave the company,

putting the company well on the way to hitting a $2 billion cost-cutting target, the automaker's chief financial officer said Tuesday.

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GM shares were trading down nearly 2 per cent at midday, even though CFO Paul Jacobson said demand for GM's trucks and SUVs remains strong in the United States.

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GM has been able to raise prices in the United States over the past two years as supply chain bottlenecks kept production in check. Going forward,

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Jacobson said the opportunity to boost prices much further "isn't there. We have to be more urgent around cost-cutting."

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GM will cut production to keep inventories in check,

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Jacobson said. The automaker earlier this year shut down a pickup truck assembly factory in Fort Wayne, Indiana, for two weeks.

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