German automaker Volkswagen says it has reached an agreement with its union, ending a three-month standoff over proposed major cost-cutting measures, including plant closures.
The company and union made the announcement on Friday.
The union says the deal includes avoiding plant closures in the country, as well as safeguarding employment until 2030. But some wages and holiday allowances will be reduced for a certain period of time.
Volkswagen says it will relocate the production of its Golf models from the northern city of Wolfsburg to Mexico from 2027.
Its plant in the eastern city of Dresden will stop vehicle production at the end of 2025, but the company says it will explore alternative options for its use.
The automaker also announced an agreement on a socially responsible reduction of its workforce by more than 35,000 at German Volkswagen sites by 2030.
Union and management representatives began negotiations in September. But the two sides remained far apart, and the union staged large-scale strikes twice this month. About 100,000 employees took part in each walkout.
The automaker has been struggling financially amid a drop in demand in Europe and intensifying competition with Chinese electric-vehicle makers. Any plant closure inside Germany would have been the first since Volkswagen's establishment in 1937.
The company and union made the announcement on Friday.
The union says the deal includes avoiding plant closures in the country, as well as safeguarding employment until 2030. But some wages and holiday allowances will be reduced for a certain period of time.
Volkswagen says it will relocate the production of its Golf models from the northern city of Wolfsburg to Mexico from 2027.
Its plant in the eastern city of Dresden will stop vehicle production at the end of 2025, but the company says it will explore alternative options for its use.
The automaker also announced an agreement on a socially responsible reduction of its workforce by more than 35,000 at German Volkswagen sites by 2030.
Union and management representatives began negotiations in September. But the two sides remained far apart, and the union staged large-scale strikes twice this month. About 100,000 employees took part in each walkout.
The automaker has been struggling financially amid a drop in demand in Europe and intensifying competition with Chinese electric-vehicle makers. Any plant closure inside Germany would have been the first since Volkswagen's establishment in 1937.
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Summary
Volkswagen, a German automaker, has reached an agreement with its union to end a three-month standoff over cost-cutting measures. The deal includes avoiding plant closures in Germany and safeguarding employment until 2030, but there will be wage reductions for some employees during a certain
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ID: 02a74163-09c9-4940-b76a-ddbb18bce672
Category ID: nhk
URL: https://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/en/news/20241221_04/
Date: Dec. 21, 2024
Created: 2024/12/23 07:00
Updated: 2025/12/08 07:40
Last Read: 2024/12/23 07:45