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US: General Motors to offer more job buyouts
By Shannon Jones
21 January 2008
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General Motors executives are planning to offer early retirement
incentives or buyouts to the automakers 72,000 hourly workforce,
an indication that significant new production cuts are coming
in the face of declining auto sales.
GM CEO Rick Wagoner announced January 17, at an industry analyst
conference in Dearborn, Michigan, that the company will offer
retirement incentives to some 46,000 workers. Further job buyouts
will be announced in February. The company has cut 34,000 jobs
since announcing its so-called turnaround plan in 2005.
GM is anticipating sales declines in 2008 and has indicated
that it wants to run its plants as close to 100 percent capacity
as possible. It is now producing at around 85 percent capacity.
However, it is hardly a secret that the main goal of the buyouts
is to reduce costs by forcing out higher paid older workers. Under
terms of the recent contract negotiated with the United Auto Workers,
GM can replace senior workers with new hires earning as low as
$14 an hour with limited benefits, about half the current $28
per hour standard wage.
Wagoner did not spell out how many total jobs GM plans to eliminate.
He did indicate that the company may cut production at powertrain
and engine plants if the US economy weakens further. However,
the companys official plans are based on unrealistic estimates
that project only a marginal decline of industry sales to the
low $16 million range. Lehman Brothers analysts called GM projections
a little out of sync with the current economic environment.
US industry sales have fallen by some 1 million units already
since GM announced its turnaround plan in 2005. At that time the
company foresaw expanding US sales. In contrast to GM estimates,
some economists are predicting a sales decline to 15.5 million
units in 2008. Even that figure may be overly optimistic if the
economy moves into recession.
The new round of job cuts by General Motors will have a devastating
impact on communities in industrial states such as Michigan, where
the company is the largest employer. Michigan already suffers
from the highest unemployment rate in the United States, 7.6 percent,
largely due to job cuts in the auto industry. Total employment
in the state fell 90,000 in 2007, including 25,000 manufacturing
jobs.
GM is taking advantage of the threat of recession and mounting
economic fears among working class families to induce senior workers
to take what incentives they can get and leave the plants. The
total cost savings to GM for each senior worker it can replace
are quite substantial. New hires will earn an average of $26 in
wages and benefits compared to $62 for current full-time workers.
General Motors says it expects to save $5 billion in labor
costs due to the two-tier system and other concessions surrendered
by the UAW. The company also predicts its annual pension and health
care obligations will drop to $1 billion annually from the current
$7 billion by 2010 after it hands over responsibility for retiree
health care obligations to the UAW. The 2007 national contract
shifted responsibility for these obligations, totaling some $46.7
billion, to a voluntary employee beneficiary association trust
fund to be administered by the auto union at a cost of less than
60 cents on the dollar.
There is no doubt that GM is in serious financial straits.
US auto sales are at their lowest level in nine years. The company
had to write down $39 billion from its balance sheet in the third
quarter of 2007 and GMs stock is down about 50 percent since
its high in mid October. Further, GMs financial arm GMAC
Financial Services, in which it holds a 49 percent stake, has
been hit hard by the mortgage lending crisis.
However, GM share prices rose 3 percent on Friday after Wagoners
announcement of the buyouts and anticipated cost savings. Wall
Streets confidence in GM is largely based on the continuing
collaboration of the UAW in forcing the impact of the crisis of
the US automakers onto the shoulders of workers.
The UAW justified the massive concessions it made in the 2007
auto contract negotiations on the grounds that they were necessary
to secure job security. The announcement by GM underscores the
bogus character of these assurances.
This is further demonstrated by the fact that the UAW is not
opposing GMs plans. Far from it. In a recent statement UAW
President Ron Gettelfinger boasted that the UAW was helping GM
slash costs by $1,000 per vehicle.
According to a report in the Wall Street Journal, Chrysler
is in discussion with the UAW over further cuts. Chrysler, which
has far fewer workers near retirement age than GM, stands to gain
far less in the short run from the two-tier wage system than its
larger rival. The UAW has not indicated what, if any, additional
cuts are under discussion, but there is no reason to believe they
wont be substantial.
Ford, the second largest US automaker, also has substantially
fewer workers at or near retirement age than GM. The auto company
will undoubtedly insist the UAW match any additional concessions
handed over to Chrysler.
All three US-based automakers are looking forward to negotiations
with the Canadian Auto Workers later this year where they hope,
based on the 2007 agreement with the UAW, to extract significant
concessions.
See Also:
US judge imposes gag order against retired
auto workers in UAW-GM case
[8 January 2008]
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