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WSWS : Workers
Struggles : Europe
New Opel boss in Europe
Auto workers face layoffs at GM's German subsidiary
By our reporter
4 August 1998
The German General Motors subsidiary, Adam Opel AG, has relied
on collaboration with the union and the works council to impose
attacks on wages, jobs and working conditions. Opel, which has
44,000 employees, brought in a record turnover of 30,000 million
marks last year. This, however, could not be turned into a sufficient
profit to satisfy the GM parent company.
General Motors reacted by sending out-going Opel boss David
Herman to Russia and appointing Gary Cowger to succeed him. Since
last June 19 Cowger has been running Opel AG as its director.
His appointment was unanimously approved by the board of directors,
and seconded by the unions.
Cowger has not as yet announced any far-reaching changes. But
in a recent BusinessWeek article, Herman was accused of
having a paternal attitude toward the Opel concern. He had kept
the Opel company too "German".
Cowger is expected to push through the measures which GM headquarters
announced at the beginning of the year, namely, reducing staff
in Germany by 20 to 30 percent and taking advantage of cheap labour--preferably
in Eastern Europe. Cowger said he would receive "clearly
extended powers" to this end.
When GM complained that Opel under Herman was a millstone around
its neck, the IG-Metall (metal workers union) and all the members
of the Opel works council immediately rallied around Herman and
defended "German quality work" against "the Americans
in Detroit". Just a few days later they settled negotiations
for local agreements, which brought a cut in costs for Opel of
at least 200 million marks a year. All German works are affected,
apart from the new site at Eisenach which, due to its low wages
and extremely rationalised production methods, has become the
most productive plant and a model for the entire European car
industry.
At the heart of this contract are severe cutbacks in wages
and jobs and increased flexibility in working times. The current
working hour corridors will be widened as required at the Rüsselshheim
and Bochum plants. In the diesel motor work at Kaiserslautern
a second shift was already introduced in April 1997.
Should increases be negotiated in the next four years for standard
wages, these will automatically be 1.25 percent lower for Opel
employees. For a skilled worker this means at least 700 marks
less a year. For Opel it means a profit of 50 million marks. Work
on Saturdays is to be extended and used to balance working hour
accounts in "golden periods" of full production. However,
should overtime become necessary because of the volume of orders,
future pay increases will be lowered.
For apprentices, the Opel bonus will not be applicable. They
will only be paid according to the current standard wage. Contrary
to the claims made by the IG-Metall and the works council, there
is no guarantee of being hired after the apprenticeship. Who is
to be taken on is decided by a selection commission which judges
every individual person by his or her time debit and "performance".
Those declared to be "suitable for Opel" do not receive
anything close to the Opel wage. Rather they must be content with
a job at the far lower rate of a supplier or at another location.
A young worker at the factory gate in Rüsselsheim explained
what this means: "They held a gun to our head: either you
move to Bochum (250 km away) or you can pack your things and queue
up at the dole office. Safe jobs, reasonable training--that's
completely out of the question. I was trained as a pattern maker
and now I install the front seats in the Omega. There is no demand
for pattern makers, they say."
As far as staff reductions are concerned, the contract states
that they should be arrived at without direct redundancies--with
the inevitable proviso: as long as the market situation permits.
The process of making older workers leave through early retirement
is to be speeded up, while at the same time the company's pension
scheme is reduced. This is how some 4,000 jobs will disappear
at the Rüsselsheim plant in the next four years.
As soon as this local agreement had been signed it became clear
that it did not represent an alternative to GM's announced reduction
of staff in Europe by 30 percent, but was rather the instrument
through which it would be pushed through. The management announced
that all manufacturing shops would probably be pulled down, supposedly
to make room for a new building which would require only half
of the work force.
"No one knows if anything will be produced in Rüsselsheim.
After all, assembling in Poland and Russia is much cheaper,"
a Turkish worker ruminated at the factory gate. In fact, General
Motors' new plant in Poland will go into full production next
year. Whether the new factory in Rüsselsheim will ever be
built is more than doubtful in view of a capacity surplus in the
European car industry of 7 million cars, or 42 percent of demand
per year. The fact, moreover, that most apprentices in Rüsselsheim
have to go to Bochum if they want to be taken on by the company
speaks volumes.
The unanimous line from trade union headquarters, the works
council and editorial offices was: "The German sites are
safe!" They were all satisfied, having reckoned that the
cutbacks would probably hit the workers in Antwerp (Belgium) or
Luton (England) if it came to mass layoffs and factory closures.
But works council members and trade union officials weren't
lazy in Antwerp either. As production fell slightly at German
Opel sites last year, it increased in Antwerp. And only one week
after the German site agreements, management and union representatives
at Opel Belgium presented a new company agreement calling for
massive wage cuts, extensive flexibility of working hours and
rapid staff reductions.
At least 170,000 jobs will be axed in the next months. First
of all, 600 employees with limited work contracts will be fired,
the others will follow by means of early retirement regulations
or redundancies due to sickness, etc. All newly employed staff
will only be paid standard wage without the Opel bonus, which
means an approximately 10 percent lower income. Several hundred
workers have to accept even higher losses of around 25 percent.
Although they carry out their work as before, following outsourcing
they legally belong to a new subsidiary of General Motors, which
is not bound to the Opel pay agreements in force.
The shift system's readjustment also means a radical change.
In a vote concerning the company agreement, the work force may
"democratically" choose between two shift types proposed.
One of them is coupled with even fewer jobs and a regular night
shift, the other with a few jobs more (73) but with wage cuts
of nearly 20 percent.
"We are allowed to choose between a rock and a hard place,
that's all!" is what a worker thought at the Antwerp plant
gate. "This new company agreement is a scandal. I have to
anticipate my income dropping by 10 or 20 percent, and that's
after it has been going downhill for years. One thing that's certain
for me is that the trade unions don't represent us. They represent
the company. That's why they don't think it necessary to inform
us, the work force, but do everything behind closed doors."
Another worker was even clearer: "In my opinion, this
company agreement is the beginning of the end. I've been working
at Opel for 28 years and things have never looked as bad as this.
Work is getting harder and harder, work pressure is enormous.
I have to work in a 45 second rhythm--that's just too much. The
wage sacrifices demanded from us are bigger and bigger, and in
the end the factory might still be closed."
The three unions involved at Opel Belgium--ABVV Metaal, ACLVB
and ACV Metaal--declared in an extensive document their agreement
with the aims of the company to lower wages and axe jobs:
"The talks took place under heavy pressure from the company
agreements which were signed last week for the German Opel plants.
The view of both sides, management and trade unions, was that
the slight advantage in costs of the Antwerp plant, compared to
the German works, must be maintained--whatever happens."
At a press conference of the three unions a WSWS reporter asked
whether they knew that, for years now, the works councils in Bochum
and Rüsselsheim had similarly been justifying company agreements
to lower costs by arguing that the sites in Bochum and Rüsselsheim
had to be defended against the competitors in Antwerp and England.
"We know that!" answered Pol Fransen, the unions'
chief negotiator at Opel Belgium. The WSWS reporter broached the
subject again: "The South Korean unions have just signed
an agreement which paves the way to slash wages and jobs in order
to increase productivity in the works there. Won't you then soon
sign a new company agreement for further wage cuts and rationalisations
in order to preserve the advantage in costs against Korean competition?"
Pol Fransen, together with all other trade union officials present,
nodded his head in agreement: "Yes, yes, it's a downward
spiral!"
See Also:
Interview with a GM-Opel worker in
Germany
"Our great grandfathers would turn in their graves."
[4 August 1998]
After the defeat of the GM strike: What
way forward for auto workers?
[3 August 1998]
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