Dubai Telegraph - Unions to protest as Volkswagen thrashes out job cut plans

EUR -
AED 4.199298
AFN 73.18081
ALL 93.87757
AMD 419.781852
ANG 2.047227
AOA 1048.53925
ARS 1700.852466
AUD 1.646773
AWG 2.058201
AZN 1.940423
BAM 1.957383
BBD 2.3024
BDT 140.887932
BGN 1.933428
BHD 0.431351
BIF 3405.967516
BMD 1.143445
BND 1.478928
BOB 7.917021
BRL 5.875475
BSD 1.143195
BTN 108.998635
BWP 15.525829
BYN 3.267271
BYR 22411.51843
BZD 2.29937
CAD 1.619952
CDF 2586.472499
CHF 0.922285
CLF 0.027063
CLP 1065.187601
CNY 7.779141
CNH 7.768616
COP 3805.098493
CRC 520.061499
CUC 1.143445
CUP 30.301288
CVE 110.356669
CZK 24.25315
DJF 203.588223
DKK 7.474293
DOP 67.216723
DZD 152.22735
EGP 56.713946
ERN 17.151672
ETB 184.528547
FJD 2.555827
FKP 0.855824
GBP 0.853519
GEL 3.018772
GGP 0.855824
GHS 13.061793
GIP 0.855824
GMD 84.043001
GNF 10025.969133
GTQ 8.722063
GYD 239.147605
HKD 8.961114
HNL 30.604273
HRK 7.534616
HTG 149.603991
HUF 357.211589
IDR 20687.203644
ILS 3.447886
IMP 0.855824
INR 109.130431
IQD 1497.540953
IRR 1571950.763191
ISK 143.399754
JEP 0.855824
JMD 181.847078
JOD 0.810699
JPY 185.669709
KES 147.812763
KGS 99.991927
KHR 4615.793804
KMF 492.824859
KPW 1029.100736
KRW 1725.938213
KWD 0.354022
KYD 0.952775
KZT 534.47462
LAK 25793.862068
LBP 102379.104189
LKR 383.376488
LRD 207.500548
LSL 18.756538
LTL 3.376295
LVL 0.691659
LYD 7.314076
MAD 10.690547
MDL 20.081593
MGA 4888.954185
MKD 61.624481
MMK 2400.868516
MNT 4101.149228
MOP 9.228085
MRU 45.639911
MUR 53.890067
MVR 17.666253
MWK 1982.43807
MXN 20.054467
MYR 4.661831
MZN 73.06535
NAD 18.756538
NGN 1574.752636
NIO 42.069243
NOK 11.116777
NPR 174.377211
NZD 1.987267
OMR 0.439603
PAB 1.143225
PEN 3.888803
PGK 5.028067
PHP 70.507665
PKR 317.762179
PLN 4.323834
PYG 6954.624899
QAR 4.167771
RON 5.235845
RSD 117.339121
RUB 87.044744
RWF 1681.167079
SAR 4.290349
SBD 9.236829
SCR 15.348903
SDG 686.650798
SEK 11.044282
SGD 1.477885
SHP 0.853697
SLE 27.814269
SLL 23977.470298
SOS 653.254082
SRD 42.99469
STD 23666.999123
STN 24.517042
SVC 10.003309
SYP 126.387354
SZL 18.750033
THB 38.167014
TJS 10.569449
TMT 4.002057
TND 3.379233
TOP 2.753141
TRY 53.599437
TTD 7.757392
TWD 36.79503
TZS 3008.401057
UAH 50.88966
UGX 4212.928441
USD 1.143445
UYU 45.968184
UZS 13730.405346
VES 783.357065
VND 30066.881485
VUV 136.931435
WST 3.173613
XAF 656.496586
XAG 0.018962
XAU 0.000277
XCD 3.090217
XCG 2.060476
XDR 0.816389
XOF 656.502333
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.082153
ZAR 18.667229
ZMK 10292.372952
ZMW 20.607667
ZWL 368.188765
  • CMSC

    0.0300

    22.04

    +0.14%

  • RYCEF

    0.2400

    19.25

    +1.25%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    13.07

    -0.15%

  • RBGPF

    -0.4600

    67.86

    -0.68%

  • BCE

    -0.1600

    21.29

    -0.75%

  • RELX

    -0.1400

    31.91

    -0.44%

  • GSK

    -0.1400

    52.38

    -0.27%

  • BP

    -0.6650

    38.545

    -1.73%

  • NGG

    -1.0450

    82.485

    -1.27%

  • RIO

    0.7210

    89.521

    +0.81%

  • JRI

    0.0350

    13.035

    +0.27%

  • AZN

    -9.5000

    179.78

    -5.28%

  • BTI

    -0.4000

    60.99

    -0.66%

  • BCC

    1.2000

    72.49

    +1.66%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    22.32

    -0.13%

Unions to protest as Volkswagen thrashes out job cut plans
Unions to protest as Volkswagen thrashes out job cut plans / Photo: Ronny HARTMANN - AFP

Unions to protest as Volkswagen thrashes out job cut plans

German auto giant Volkswagen's management meet Thursday to thrash out plans for what could be the biggest ever restructuring in the global auto industry, with unions set to protest any mass job cuts.

Text size:

Europe's largest carmaker has come under intense pressure from US tariffs, slimmer profit margins from electric cars and above all intense competition in China, the world's largest auto market.

VW, whose 10 brands range from mass-market Seats to premium Porsches, is already in the process of axing 50,000 jobs in Germany by 2030, including 35,000 at its namesake marque.

The cuts at the Volkswagen brand are part of a deal reached with unions at the end of 2024, which also ruled out plant closures in Germany until at least the end of the decade.

But CEO Oliver Blume is now eyeing cutting 100,000 jobs worldwide, as well as the closure of three German VW plants and an Audi factory, weekly Manager Magazin reported, citing company sources.

"If these plans came to fruition, we would stop them with all our might", Christiane Benner, head of the powerful IG Metall union, said in a joint statement with VW works council chief Daniela Cavallo.

IG Metall is organising protests by VW workers outside plants across the country Thursday, when the carmaker's bosses will present the restructuring plans to the supervisory board.

- Complex ownership -

Ordinarily the supervisory board's 20 members are split evenly between worker and shareholder representatives.

However the workers' side currently have a majority after Susanne Wiegand, former boss of defence group Renk, recently resigned.

The 89-year-old group also has a complex ownership model that makes restructuring tricky, with Lower Saxony state -- home to VW's Wolfsburg headquarters and six plants -- holding a substantial stake that gives it the power to block decisions.

No major announcement is expected immediately after the meeting, which is likely the start of a lengthy process of negotiation, several sources close to the matter told AFP.

But if the plans are ultimately pushed through, then it would amount to a roughly 15-percent reduction in VW's global workforce of some 630,000.

This would eclipse all other major job-cutting drives in the auto industry, notably Detroit-based General Motors's move to cut almost 50,000 jobs in 2009 as it declared bankruptcy.

The whole German auto industry -- including VW's peers BMW and Mercedes-Benz with their suppliers -- has been struggling in recent years, with job cuts and overhauls increasingly common.

- 'Abrupt fall' -

While refusing to give details, a VW spokesman said the group needed to "improve its competitiveness" and apply "even more rigorous cost and investment discipline".

Blume has repeatedly said the situation is critical, telling shareholders earlier this year that the company needed to change or it would die.

"Our business model of past decades no longer works", he said in a March letter, citing "regional market conditions, changes in trade policy, massive regulatory requirements in the various regions of the world and our high-cost position, above all in Europe".

Higher US tariffs on cars and auto parts introduced last year are expected to cost VW five billion euros ($5.7 billion) annually, with the situation particularly acute at Audi and Porsche, which have no US factories.

VW is also being elbowed out of China, with years of declining sales amid stiff local competition last year leaving the firm's vehicle deliveries in the country at their lowest level since 2011.

"The cars that are being sold in China, some of them are the world's best", Tu Le, founder of Sino Auto Insights, told AFP. "The fall for the German automakers has been really abrupt."

Blume has floated the possibility of VW's European plants making the company's Chinese-designed cars to use up spare capacity and also said that production for defence contractors could be an option.

"The Chinese are coming to Europe, also building factories which are highly efficient," he warned in April.

"We cannot compete with underutilised plants."

D.Naveed--DT