The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Union threatens to cripple VW production in pay dispute

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BERLIN: German union IG Metall threatened to cripple vehicle production at Volkswagen if top executives at Europe’s biggest carmaker continue to block sizeable pay increases for German staff.

IG Metall is incensed about an offer proposed by Volkswagen’s (VW) management on Tuesday which the union said would raise pay for 120,000 staff at western German plants by no more than 2.2 per cent over 12 months, about a third of the 6 per cent it is seeking.

After three rounds of fruitless bargaining, more than 20,000 workers at VW’s main Wolfsburg factory on Thursday walked off their shifts for two hours, staging the first warning strikes at VW since 2004, IG Metall said, adding thousands more staff at five other German VW plants joined in the protests.

“If necessary we will bring half the VW group to a standstill,” works council chief Bernd Osterloh said at a rally at the Wolfsburg plant, referring to the global carmaker’s German operations.

“We will not hesitate to plan further warning strikes,” Osterloh said. “And those would hit the car-making plants just as much as the component sites which deliver engines, transmissi­ons and parts to the entire group.”

Besides the 6 per cent pay demand, IG Metall is also pushing for improvemen­ts in VW’s corporate pension scheme and more hiring of apprentice­s to help cope with an industry shift to electric vehicles and self-driving technology.

But VW, facing billions of euros in costs and fines over its diesel emissions-test cheating scandal and huge investment­s for its subsequent transforma­tion plan, has dismissed the demands and called for a wage agreement with a “sense of proportion”.

The carmaker does not expect the disruption­s on Thursday to impact delivery commitment­s, a VW spokesman said, without elaboratin­g.

The in-house pay dispute at VW coincides with IG Metall’s efforts across Germany to push for a 6-per cent wage increase for about 3.9 million workers in the country’s metal and engineerin­g industry.

Thousands of workers on Thursday began a second day of 24-hour strikes also affecting Daimler and VW’s Porsche brand. —

 ??  ?? German union IG Metall threatened to cripple vehicle production at Volkswagen if top executives at Europe’s biggest carmaker continue to block sizeable pay increases for German staff. — AFP photo
German union IG Metall threatened to cripple vehicle production at Volkswagen if top executives at Europe’s biggest carmaker continue to block sizeable pay increases for German staff. — AFP photo

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