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Spain: Auto unions agree redundancies at SEAT
By Daniel ORourke and Paul Mitchell
28 December 2005
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After months of talks and a series of militant strikes, unions
at Volkswagens Spanish subsidiary have agreed to hundreds
of redundancies. Some 686 workers will lose their jobs at SEAT,
which employs about 16,000 autoworkers, mainly at the Martorell
complex in Barcelona.
The SEAT workers had previously rejected a company plan to
cut their hours and wages by 10 percent and a subsequent demand
for 1,346 redundanciesnearly 9 percent of the workforce.
On December 2, SEAT workers held their second strike in a month,
supported by a majority of Martorells 12,000 staff. Industrial
action on November 10 had led to a demonstration in Barcelona
that brought the city centre to a standstill and stopped production
at Martorell and the smaller Zona Franca plant.
The SEAT dispute erupted in the midst of a strike wave that
included lorry drivers, fishermen and miners. Other strikes were
looming at the public radio and TV company RTVE and the Spanish
national airline Iberia. The Socialist Workers Party government
(PSOE) led by Prime Minister Jose Luis Zapatero was warned that
it faced a winter of discontent.
During the dispute, Matias Carnero of the PSOE-aligned General
Workers Union (UGT) and president of the SEAT workers committee
called the job losses barbarous and condemned the
intransigent stance of the SEAT management. The UGT
threatened further strikes over the following weeks.
Now the UGT says it is satisfied with the deal
and even called for the Barcelona-based not-for-profit pension
and savings bank La Caixa to take a stake in Volkswagen.
The bank is closely linked to but not controlled by the regional
government in Catalonia that helped broker the deal when talks
collapsed. We dont rule out this formula, said
Miquel Iceta, spokesman of the Catalan Socialist Party, a partner
in the regional coalition government.
Most redundant workers will receive 45 days salary for every
year worked, with a minimum of 12,000. Others will be forced
to take a leave of absence for up to two years and
receive 20 days wages for every year worked.
From the start of the SEAT dispute the union bureaucracy sought
to isolate it and prevent the development of a broader movement
that would threaten the labour reforms the Zapatero government
has been discussing with the unions and the employers confederation
(CEOE). International financial institutions have been demanding
the reforms, citing Spains loss in competitiveness
caused by the drying up of European Union (EU) subsidies and competition
from poorly paid workers from the new EU member countries and
Asia. The CEOE has advised Spanish companies to end all their
production in Spain and relocate to these cheaper regions of the
world.
At the heart of the labour reforms are the collective agreements
and open-ended contractswon as the Franco dictatorship collapsed
in the 1970sthat guarantee wages will rise with inflation
and protect other conditions and rights for 70 percent of Spanish
workers. Attempts to carry out these attacks in the past have
provoked several general strikes in Spain, including one in 2002
that caused the right-wing Popular Party government to back down
and withdraw its proposals.
The SEAT workers were first called out on strike two days after
the UGT and the Stalinist-led Trade Union Confederation of Workers
Commissions (Comisiones Obreras, CC.OO.) ended a strike by miners.
They accepted virtually all the proposals in the governments
Mining Plan, which foresees coal production dropping from 12 million
tons this year to about 9 million in 2012, and the number of jobs
being cut over the same period from 8,600 to 5,800.
Global crisis for auto industry
SEAT chairman Andreas Schleef welcomed the job cuts, saying,
The agreement that we have reached will allow us to considerably
reduce forced layoffs. But he then warned that it was unfortunate
that the agreement does not cover all the staff surplus
to requirement.
As a result of the agreement, Volkswagen says it will continue
with its $750 million investment as part of a restructuring plan
entitled New SEAT, which involves the production of
a new model of its Ibiza car and another new model at Martorell
from 2008.
To what extent this investment materialises and car production
continues is questionable in light of the crisis facing SEAT,
its parent company VW and the auto industry globally.
Most of the major auto companies built production plants in
Spain in the 1980s, attracted by its closeness to big European
markets like France and Germany and its relatively cheap labour.
SEAT, founded in the 1950s by the Franco fascist government
with help from Italys Fiat, was bought by VW in 1990. The
Martorell complex, which also houses a technical and research
and development centre, was opened as a state-of-the-art production
facility in 1993, making it one of the most efficient plants in
Europe. It had a peak production quota of 2,250 units a day, equivalent
to more than 800,000 vehicles a year.
However, estimates suggest the company will only produce 386,200
vehicles in 2005, nearly 60,000 less than the target for the year
and 13 percent lower than last year. It is expected to lose $118
million in 2005, twice as much in 2006, and $590 million by 2008.
SEAT workers are being forced to compete with workers in plants
owned by VW and Skoda (another VW subsidiary) in Eastern Europe,
where wages are just a fraction of those in Spain.
Not only have sales at SEAT declined drastically, but so too
have those at VW and in Europe as a whole, its most profitable
region. The high profits the company secured in 2001 and 2002
were followed by heavy losses. In North America, the company lost
$1.1 billion in 2004, and similar losses are forecast for 2005
and 2006. The rise in the value of Brazils currency, the
Real, has severely affected the profitability of VWs Fox
city-car, which was being shipped from Latin America to Europe.
In China, VW is expected to make a loss of $118 million in 2005,
and twice that in 2006.
New VW boss Wolfgang Bernhard, who rose to prominence by ruthlessly
streamlining Chrysler in the US, wants to save $8 billion annually.
This can only be done by cutting tens of thousands of jobs and
closing entire factories. Bernhard is expected to announce a new
restructuring plan in early 2006.
According to a report by Citicorp analysts, VW should
be the most fertile field for auto restructuring, with capacity
utilisation of 72-73 percent in Europe, and in our view a labour
force 15,000 to 20,000 too high being paid 20 percent above engineering
norms.
This view was echoed by the automotive analysts B&D Forecast,
who said, We estimate that there is an excess of 15,000
too many jobs (in Germany, Spain and Belgium) and that Bernhard
will take the tough decisions necessary to restructure the brand
and make black numbers in the future. Their report said
Bernhard will force the unions to fall into line and make
the needed concessions over wages and headcount.
As part of the restructuring, the SEAT brand could be discontinued
or absorbed into other VW subsidiaries such as Audi or Skoda.
In advance of Bernhards restructuring plans, the VW board
has been reorganised, using the pretext of a corruption scandal
earlier this year. The decades-old VW systemconsidered
the epitome of what was called the German model of workers
participation, with its cosy relations between the board
of directors, the works council and the trade unionshas
now become an obstacle to the drastic restructuring the company
wants.
Works Council Chairman Klaus Volkert and Director of Personnel
Peter Hartz (author of the hated labour market reforms in Germany
that carry his name) resigned and several leading managers were
dismissed after legal proceedings for corruption were instigated.
Hartz and current chairman Ferdinand Piech were appointed following
a sharp drop in sales and profits in 1992-93, at the instigation
of former German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder of the Social
Democratic Party, the then-state premier of Lower Saxony, where
VW has its headquarters, and Franz Steinkühler, former chairman
of the IG Metall union. Together they managed to significantly
reduce wages, introduce flexible working hours, initiate gradual
job cuts and pay new workers at substantially lower rates, thus
further dividing the workforce.
Abroad, the company has a reputation for the brutal treatment
of its workers. In Nigeria and Brazil in 1987, company security
guards joined with military police to suppress striking workers.
In 1992, at VWs Mexican plant in Puebla, all 14,300 workers
were sacked after taking strike action, as were 1,300 striking
employees at the VW South African plant in Uitenhagen in 2000.
Hartz justified the decision by claiming that the strike was illegal
under South African labour law. When the workforce at VWs
Sao Carlos plant in Brazil held a go-slow action to prevent the
introduction of flexible working and a reduction in paid work
time, 22 strike leaders were summarily sacked.
The restructuring at VW is part of a worldwide onslaught against
autoworkers by the corporations, aided and abetted by the trade
union bureaucracy. Delphi and Visteon management in the US are
demanding the slashing of jobs and unprecedented wage cuts and
Ford intends to announce its downsizing plans in January 2006.
The SEAT dispute once more shows it is impossible to conduct
any serious struggle today without advancing a programme for the
transformation of society that places the interests of working
peoplethe vast majority of the populationabove the
drive for profit by the corporations and the financial oligarchy.
This means the reorganisation of economic life along socialist
lines.
The globalisation of production has robbed the unions of the
possibility of negotiating social compromises within the national
framework. Under the pressure of global competition and the constant
threat of transferring jobs to low-wage countries, the UGT bureaucracy
regards its task as defending Spanish factoriesa development
that can be observed in all trade unions throughout the world.
See Also:
Workers Struggles: Europe, Middle East
& Africa
[9 December 2005]
Spain: labour reforms threaten
winter of discontent
[21 November 2005]
Politics, socialism and the
struggle of Delphi workers
[5 November 2005]
The miserable end of the Volkswagen
model
[2 July 2005]
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