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Volkswagen workers strike as economic model buckles

Bratislava - Workers at Volkswagen’s Slovak unit began an indefinite strike over wages, underscoring the risk of a skilled-labour shortage materialising in a key European Union manufacturing hub as unemployment plumbs record lows.

The walkout began at 6:00 on Tuesday after talks failed to reach a last-ditch compromise on Monday. Workers are asking for a 16% rise in wages by next year, almost double the company’s last offer for an 8.9% increase, a one-time payment of €350 and other benefits.

The union’s demands are “irresponsible and put the future of the company and jobs at jeopardy,” the unit’s spokesperson, Lucia Kovarovic Makayova, said by email.

Slovakia, the world’s largest car producer per capita, is at the center of a transformation across the EU’s manufacturing-heavy east as plunging unemployment fuels wage demands and puts the region’s cheap-labor economic model at risk.

While companies are trying to control wage costs, workers and some policy makers have pushed for bigger paychecks, arguing that they’re needed to raise living standards that have languished well below those of richer EU states in the quarter century since the fall of Communism.

Maximum, minimum

The average wage in Volkswagen’s Slovak unit is about €1 800 a month. That’s the highest among the country’s three foreign carmakers, which also include Kia and PSA.

While the German carmaker’s assembly-line workers earn almost double the Slovak average of €912 a month, they argue their pay doesn’t correspond with productivity. It compares with an average €4 200 earned by workers at Volkswagen’s German factories.

Hundreds of workers gathered in front of the Bratislava factory instead of starting their morning shift and waved placards saying “Don’t Humiliate Us” and “We Do the Maximum, You Do the Minimum.”

The strike halted the production of sport-utility vehicles, while the assembly of so-called New Small Family cars continued, the company said. Production wasn’t affected in Volkswagen’s two Slovak parts-making factories. The unit made 388 687 cars last year, including luxury sport-utility vehicles such as the Audi Q7, and plans similar output in 2017.

With Volkswagen’s 12 000 workers making it the largest employer in the country of 5 million, every 12 days of the strike will knock 0.1 percentage point off annual economic growth in the given quarter, the Slovak Finance Ministry has estimated.

The risk of further shutdowns may rise, as workers push for higher wages, with Kia and PSA negotiating pay increases of 6.3% and 9%, respectively, earlier this year. The labour shortage will probably only deepen next year after Jaguar Land Rover starts hiring thousands of workers for a new factory and the government sees economic growth exceeding 4%.

Rising wage pressures “are a natural outcome of the booming economy and negative demographic development,” said Juraj Valachy, an economist at Tatra Banka in Bratislava. “Companies must prepare for steeper wage increases than in the past.”

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