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Ford Australia announces axing of Geelong engine plant
By Richard Phillips
23 July 2007
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After months of speculation, Ford Australia announced last
week that it will end six-cylinder engine production at its Geelong
plant by 2010, axing 600 full-time jobs or almost 30 percent of
the companys workforce in the Victorian regional city. The
closure will flow on to auto-parts manufacturers, with an estimated
3,000 local jobs to be slashed in these industries.
Ford, which has been manufacturing in Geelong since 1925, has
eliminated about 2,800 jobs in the city since the early 1990s.
The latest job cuts will devastate the local community where unemployment,
even according to understated official figures, is at 7 percent
or almost double the average across Australia.
The announcement follows the axing of 640 full-time jobs and
120 contract positions at the companys main assembly plant
in Broadmeadows last November and a wave of job losses over the
past three years in the Australian car and parts industry.
Ford Australias president Tom Gorman told the media on
July 18 there had been a sharp drop in the sale of six cylinder
Falcon, Falcon Ute and Territory vehicles. Last year Ford Australia
lost $40.3 million, with Falcons recording the lowest sales figures
in 40 years.
A cut in tariffs on imported cars, from 10 percent now to 5
percent in 2010, the rising value of the Australian dollar and
the introduction of tougher new car emission standards were also
factors, he declared.
Gorman said that the closure was the only way to save
the company in Australia and that V6 engines would be imported
from its Lima plant in Ohio. The Ohio plant produces one million
engines a year, compared to Geelongs 70,000 in-line six
cylinder motors annually. The new engines could be used in a range
of models, Gorman continued, thus allowing Ford to slash local
production costs.
Asked to guarantee the car-makers long-term future, the
Ford chief claimed that the remaining 1,400 Ford workers in Geelong
were safe, but added, Its very difficult to confirm
what anything will look like 10 years down the road. In
other words, no Ford workers job is guaranteed.
Voicing the sentiments of Australias corporate elite
towards the closure, a July 19 editorial in Murdochs Australian
callously declared that though it might be upsetting
for Ford workers, they should not get too emotional about
the closure. Fords decision to shut the plant, it
continued, was not a bad sign at all but proof
that long-overdue industry restructuring is under way.
While Ford Australias July 18 announcement came as a
shock to Geelong workers, the corporate media, state Labor government
and the unions were told well in advance. As with previous jobs
cuts in the car industry, they have all stepped forward to assist
the company in realising its plans.
Victorian treasurer John Brumby, who admitted on Friday that
the Labor government had been told about the planned closure last
month, went into overdrive. Following the official announcement,
he met with local council and businesses chiefs and then addressed
the media and state parliament on how the Laborites would ensure
the down-sizing proceeded without a hitch.
Brumby claimed that the 600 job losses would have little impact
on the city and that the state government would accelerate capital
works plans, planning approvals and other measures to create
more jobs than are being lost. This, together with promises
of a $24 million assistance package, is designed to deflect attention
from the governments complicity in the job destruction,
and to undermine any perspective of fighting to defend the car
jobs.
Likewise, the car union leadership has shed the predictable
crocodile tears, while making clear to the company that it will
not oppose the cuts, much less lead a struggle against them.
Australian Manufacturing Workers Union (AMWU) vehicle division
secretary Ian Jones, who has presided over the destruction of
tens of thousands of jobs in the car industry, told the media
that it was a sad event for the workers, but the union
would be concentrating on redundancy negotiations.
Echoing Ford Australia, Jones claimed that the remaining 1,400
Ford jobs in Geelongin engineering, sheet metal stamping
and researchwere not threatened.
This guarantee is worth as much as the one made by union bureaucrats
last November, when they told Broadmeadows workers that the job
cuts there would stabilise the companys local operations
and bring job security to the industry. A little more than six
months later, they are at it again.
Local parts manufacturers, together with sections of the Labor
Party and the union leadership, have called for a moratorium on
the planned reduction of import tariffs on foreign car parts and
vehicles, claiming this will protect local jobs.
AMWU vehicle division secretary Ian Jones also told the media
that it was a mistake for Ford to source its engines from the
Ohio because the US had the most expensive labour rates.
In other words, Ford should recognise that Australian workers
were cheaper, and therefore more profitable for the company.
But Labor and union claims that national protectionist measures,
or more sacrifice, will save workers jobs are totally bankrupt.
Car manufacturing is a global process. Workers can only defend
their jobs and living standards on the basis of a strategy that
unites them internationally in a common struggle against the transnational
corporations and the profit system itself.
The Geelong closure is part of a ruthless international downsizing
operation by Ford and other US car manufacturers in response to
their loss of market share to their more efficient Asian and European
competitors.
Ford, General Motors and Chrysler are currently slashing tens
of thousands of jobs in the United States and around the world.
Just last September Ford, formerly one of the top two automakers
in the world, announced it would axe 44,000 jobs and shut down
16 American auto factories in an effort to stave off insolvency.
Likewise, General Motors has axed 34,000 jobs in the US alone
in the past 12 months and Daimler Chrysler is currently getting
rid of 13,000 jobs in the US and Canada. Tens of thousands more
positions are being eliminated in the auto-parts industry. This
restructuring has been accompanied by attacks on working
conditions, wages and benefits and the relocation of production
facilities to cheaper wage zones.
This global process has expressed itself in Australia with
the axing of almost 10,000 car and parts manufacturing jobs in
the past three years. And no end is in sight.
Since late last year, Ford has announced the destruction of
1,360 jobs in Victoria, General Motors Holden has shed 200 jobs
from its engine assembly plant in Port Melbourne, while in South
Australia, the company has cut 600 jobs from its Elizabeth plant.
In 2005, Mitsubishi shut its Lonsdale factory, axing 700 positions
and it has now down-sized its Tonsley Park facility to a skeleton
staff making only 50 cars a day. Hundreds of jobs have also been
axed at numerous parts makers, including Huon Corporation and
Ajax Engineered Fasteners.
To defend their jobs and living conditions, car workers need
a unified strategy and perspective. Ford workers in Geelong should
issue an appeal to their fellow car workers in Victoria and South
Australia, and organise mass meetings in both states to discuss
a strategy to fight for every job. This will require taking a
resolute stand against the union and Labor bureaucracies and their
toadying collaboration with the employers. The unions refusal
to defend their own members right to a decent, permanent
and well-paid job flows directly from their nationalist and pro-capitalist
program.
Ford workers, along with their fellow workers in Australia
and around the world must adopt an entirely different programone
that seeks to unite all working people in a common struggle for
the socialist reorganisation of society, where human needs are
placed above the drive for private profit. Under such a program,
the car industry and other key giant corporations will be taken
out of the hands of a tiny, wealthy and parasitic elite, and turned
into publicly-owned, democratically controlled enterprises that
produce for the benefit of the vast majority.
See Also:
Australia: Labor Party
and unions stifle opposition to Ford job cuts
[22 November 2006]
The Bracks government
and unions help Ford Australia axe jobs
[10 November 2006]
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