VW wage deal for 120,000 German workers avoids layoffs, plant closures
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[December 21, 2024] By
DAVID McHUGH
FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) — Volkswagen and its employee representatives
said Friday they have reached a wage deal for 120,000 German workers
that avoids plant closings and bars involuntary layoffs through 2030.
The agreement includes provisions for VW to shed more than 35,000 jobs
through early retirement and buyouts by 2030.
The deal, reached in drawn-out bargaining sessions that stretched late
into the night, is aimed at enabling the Wolfsburg-based carmaker to
cope with a drop in demand in Europe, higher raw-material costs and
increasing competition from Chinese automakers.
Lagging sales in Europe mean the company has lost potential sales of
500,000 cars a year, or the output of two factories.
The deal would save VW 1.5 billion euros ($1.56 billion) a year in labor
costs and 4 billion euros a year by slashing manufacturing capacity by
more 700,000 vehicles across its German plants through different
production arrangements.
That the agreement avoids wholesale plant closings underscores the role
played at Volkswagen by employee representatives and the state of Lower
Saxony, who together have majority on the board of directors. That gives
workers and the local government unusual leverage.
A top Volkswagen executive called it “a good agreement.”
“We had three priorities in the negotiations: reducing overcapacity in
German locations, reducing labor costs and bringing development costs
down to a competitive level,” said Thomas Schaefer, head of the
company's namesake Volkswagen brand.
“We reached sustainable solutions in all three areas.”
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Member of the Board of Management of the Volkswagen brand Thomas
Schaefer makes a statement on the wage negotiations at Volkswagen
with IG Metall, in Berlin, Germany, Friday Dec. 20, 2024. (Annette
Riedl/dpa via AP)
Thorsten Groeger, negotiator for the
IG Metall union, said employees also accepted “painful concessions."
A union statement said that the loss of bonus payments and other
compensation were part of the deal but that monthly wage levels
would not be touched. The company had pressed for a 10% wage cut.
Volkswagen argues that it must lower costs in Germany to levels
achieved by competitors and by Volkswagen plants in eastern Europe
and South America.
Though major plant closings were avoided, a factory in Dresden will
cease production at the end of next year as previous planned, and a
plant in Osnabrueck is to produce T-Roc SUVs only through the middle
of 2027. After those dates, the company will seek other uses for
Osnabrueck. Top Volkswagen employee representative Daniela Cavallo
said the Dresden plant could be repurposed “also in cooperation with
other organizations” that she didn't specify.
The company said it would move production of its Golf model from its
home plant at Wolfsburg to Puebla, Mexico, and reduce the assembly
lines at Wolfsburg from four to two that would produce the ID.3 and
CUPRA Born compact cars. Some 4,000 vehicle development jobs would
be dropped at Wolfsburg.
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