Industrial group Siemens AG won't move 2,000 phone assembly jobs from northwest Germany to lower-wage Hungary
Published:
26 June 2004 y., Saturday
Industrial group Siemens AG won't move 2,000 phone assembly jobs from northwest Germany to lower-wage Hungary, now that workers have agreed to lengthen their work week to 40 hours from 35 for no more money, the company said Thursday.
The agreement with the IG Metall union specifies that workers at the Bocholt and Kamp-Lintfort facilities must work an average of 1,760 hours a year measured over a two-year period. Excluding vacation and holidays, that amounts to an average 40-hour week, and permits the company to gear up when there's more work and have people work less when it's slow.
"The solution for Kamp-Lintfort and Bocholt is a triumph of reason," said Siemens CEO Heinrich von Pierer, who has said the facilities must cut costs or see jobs move east. "Our employee representatives, IG Metall and our company management have show that there are realistic ways to counteract job cuts in Germany."
The agreement, struck between the industrial employers' association and IG Metall, takes effect July 1 and guarantees the jobs of the covered workers at the two plants - more than 4,000 in all - who assemble mobile and cordless phones.
Šaltinis:
thestate.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Statistics Lithuania informs that based on provisional data as of 1 April 2008 foreign direct investment (FDI) made LTL 33.63 billion, or by 2.8 per cent less than on 1 January 2008.
more »
Boston-based Celent LLC has published a new report about the state of the Turkish credit-card market, which has developed rapidly over the last decade and is expected to represent a high-growth opportunity.
more »
Fastest annual revenue growth since 1999 fuels 32% increase in earnings per share.
more »
First Data Shareholders to Receive $34 per Share in Cash;
Transaction Valued at $29 Billion
more »
Belarus' international reserves decreased by 3.8 percent in January 2007 to $1,329.9 million as of February 1, according to the National Bank of Belarus (NBB).
more »
The Minsk Tractor Works (MTZ) manufactured nearly 172 billion rubels worth of industrial products in the first month of 2007, which was a 19.8-percent year-on-year increase.
more »
The Belarusian government plans to borrow up to $1 billion abroad this year to cushion the effects of a sharp hike in the price of energy resources.
more »
Russia's Audit Chamber has suggested reviewing all economy agreements between Belarus and Russia, Andrei Kokoshin, head of the standing committee on CIS affairs in the State Duma (Russia's lower parliamentary house), said on Thursday.
more »
Belarus is contemplating the purchase of two oil wells in Russia, a senior executive at the Belneftekhim state-controlled petrochemical concern said Tuesday.
more »
Aleksandr Lukashenko warned that a slowdown of Belarus' economic development pace could undermine public confidence in the government and damage the country's image in the international arena.
more »