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More US job cuts coming at Ford
By Shannon Jones
25 January 2008
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Ford Motor company says it plans to offer buyouts and early
retirement packages to most of its 54,000 US hourly workers in
an effort to further drastically reduce employment and make room
to hire thousands of lower-paid workers. The second largest American-based
car company is following the lead of General Motors, which last
week announced a similar buyout plan.
According to a January 24 report in the Wall Street Journal,
Ford is looking to cut up to 11,000 hourly jobs and 2,000
salaried positions. The cuts are to come as quickly as possible,
with most workers targeted to leave no later than April 1. Since
the start of 2006 the company has eliminated some 44,000 jobs.
Ford announced the buyout the same day it reported a $2.7 billion
loss for 2007. Losses of $3.5 billion in North America were offset
somewhat by profits from Fords European and South American
operations. Most of the 2007 loss reflected non-cash accounting
charges. Excluding these special items, Ford recorded a $126 million
operating profit in 2007, despite a 12 percent decline in sales.
Through layoffs and aggressive cost cutting, implemented with
the collaboration of the United Auto Workers union, the company
reduced its losses sharply from 2006, when it suffered a record
$12.6 billion deficit. In a preliminary fourth quarter financial
report the auto company touted its agreement with the UAW and
reported costs savings of $1.8 billion in 2007.
Like General Motors, Ford plans to replace a substantial portion
of those who take the buyouts with lower-paid new hires, who will
receive 50 percent of standard wages and lower benefits, thus
taking advantage of concessions surrendered by the UAW in the
2007 national contract.
The new round of job cuts by US automakers is the sharpest
expression of the continuing decline of American industry. Since
2000 Fords US vehicle sales have fallen drastically, from
around 4 million units a year to just over 2 million. Its market
share has fallen from over 26 percent ten years ago to 15.5 percent
in 2007.
Ford CEO Alan Mulally called the outlook for the auto industry
in 2008 challenging due to the unfolding crisis in
the US and global economy. He said the company would not return
to profitability until 2009, predicting a further decline in sales
and market share and another loss for 2008. US auto sales have
fallen for two straight years and Ford has already reduced its
assembly capacity from 3.6 million vehicles in the fourth quarter
of 2005 to 2.9 million, mostly due to job cuts.
The past year saw Ford eclipsed by Toyota as the worlds
second largest car manufacturer with the Japanese-based auto company
in a virtual dead heat with General Motors for number one, in
terms of global sales. Toyota sales also surpassed those of Ford
in the US market, marking the first time since 1931 that Ford
has not held the number two spot.
Under these conditions Ford and the other automakers are relying
on the services of the UAW bureaucracy to impose ever greater
levels of sacrifice on the backs of workers.
The new four-year contract permits lower tier workersmaking
$14 instead of $28 an hourto comprise up to 20 percent of
Fords workforce. Under a special provision in the contract,
workers at Fords Rawsonville and Sterling Heights powertrain
plants outside Detroit, currently employing some 4,500 hourly
workers, dont count toward the 20 percent cap. Ford is planning
to staff these plants entirely with lower tier workers.
Ford has reportedly reached an agreement with the UAW for two
rounds of buyouts. The first will be offered immediately to less
than 1,000 workers at three plants that have already closed. The
second round of buyouts will be offered to most remaining Ford
workers starting February 18.
Ford is reportedly offering workers eligible for retirement
$50,000, an increase over previous offers, $70,000 for skilled
trades. The company currently has 22 percent of its hourly employees
eligible for retirement, a significantly lower proportion than
General Motors.
It also reportedly plans to offer younger workers $100,000
lump sum payments and a limited extension of health care benefits.
Given workers utter lack of confidence in the UAW leadership,
it is likely that many workers will accept these paltry payouts
rather than wait to be laid off as the company continues its downsizing.
The UAW openly boasts of its role in slashing costs at the
expense of workers. UAW President Ron Gettelfinger acknowledged
that Ford plans to replace those taking buyouts with lower-paid
workers, declaring We knew what we were doing when we went
into it, but we also recognized that the companies needed help.
He has repeatedly taken note of the fact that the 2007 contract
will save the company $1,000 per vehicle.
In exchange for the massive concessions the union gave Ford,
GM and Chrysler, the UAW bureaucracy was given control of a multi-billion
retiree health care trust fund, making it the proprietor of one
of the largest private investment funds in the US and potentially
the largest shareholder of GM and Ford stock.
An opinion piece in the January 15 edition of the Wall Street
Journal titled Two Heroes of Detroit touted Gettelfinger
and Delphi Corporation CEO R. S. Millerwho initiated the
drastic wage-cutting in the industryfor their joint roles
in imposing historic givebacks on UAW members.
See Also:
US: General Motors to offer more job
buyouts
[21 January 2008]
US judge imposes gag order against retired
auto workers in UAW-GM case
[8 January 2008]
Political lessons
of the UAW contract betrayal
[19 November 2007]
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