VW seeks unprecedented plant closings in Germany as auto crisis deepens

Plans to cut thousands of jobs and slash wages as Europe’s biggest automaker tries to halt its tailspin.

The proposals to fix the struggling VW brand represent unprecedented cuts and underscore the extent of the crisis at Volkswagen. The German manufacturer has never closed a factory in its home country and a plan to reduce salaries by 10 per cent could affect some 140,000 workers there.

Following weeks of tensions after Volkswagen cancelled a job-guarantee agreement this summer, some 25,000 workers rallied at the company’s headquarters in Wolfsburg on Monday.

Daniela Cavallo, the head of Volkswagen’s powerful works council, announced the carmaker’s proposal at the assembly to try and galvanize resistance. Negotiations have been ongoing for weeks, but the severity of the planned cuts being sought wasn’t previously clear.

VW’s employees are worried that the cuts are just the beginning of plans to downsize the carmaker’s operations in Germany, which is struggling with relatively high energy and personnel costs. The moves would be another blow for Europe’s largest economy, which is expected to contract in 2024 for the second straight year.

“This is starvation, a weakening in instalments,” Cavallo said. VW’s plans threaten “tens of thousands” of jobs in Germany.

For Volkswagen, Monday’s rally kicks off what could be a contentious week. The company is expected to post declining sales and profit when it reports third-quarter results on Wednesday.

Chief executive Oliver Blume has pointed to high costs at the VW brand, but employee representatives counter that workers are being made to pay for boardroom mistakes.

The cutback plans are set to intensify anxiety in Germany, where the struggling economy has fuelled a right-wing political shift and stoked anti-immigrant sentiment. Budget austerity and the war in Ukraine has added to voter concerns as national elections loom next September.

“It is known that Volkswagen is in a difficult situation,” Wolfgang Büchner, a spokesman for Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s administration, said Monday at a regular press conference in Berlin. “Possible wrong management decisions must not be at the expense of the employees.”

Volkswagen traditionally has close ties to workers, which control half of the supervisory board seats. That representation, alongside a large stake owned by its home state of Lower Saxony, meant VW’s German operations were largely insulated from past restructuring efforts.

Volkswagen declined to comment on the exact nature of the cuts, saying only that the situation is “serious” and that both sides have a responsibility to safeguard the company’s future.

“We are not productive enough at our German locations,” VW brand chief executive Thomas Schäfer said, adding that factory costs are 25 per cent to 50 per cent above the company’s plans.

Volkswagen shares, which have fallen by 19 per cent this year, declined 1.4 per cent in Frankfurt as of 2:10 p.m. local time.

The German automaker, which issued its second profit warning in three months in late September, is in a difficult period. While its premium brands including Audi and Porsche have been the carmaker’s biggest source of profit in recent years, they’re now struggling. Porsche AG on Friday said it’s weighing cost cuts and reviewing its model lineup after a demand slump in China hit its profits.

Negotiations between management and labour have so far produced no results. A grace period will run out next month. After that, warning strikes at VW sites in Germany would be possible as soon as Dec. 1.

Management’s plans aren’t just “sabre rattling” for the negotiations, Cavallo said. “This is the plan by Germany’s largest industrial group to start selling out in its home market.”

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