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GM looks at beefing up buyout deals

 
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Jim Higgins

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Since: May 03, 2007
Posts: 760



(Msg. 1) Posted: Fri Feb 01, 2008 8:08 am
Post subject: GM looks at beefing up buyout deals
Archived from groups: alt>autos>gm (more info?)

GM looks at beefing up buyout deals
http://www.detnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080201/AUTO01/802010383/1148

Pressure to cut older work force grows after Ford adds up to $20,000 to
its retirement plans.
Sharon Terlep / The Detroit News

General Motors Corp., negotiating a buyout deal with the United Auto
Workers to clear out thousands of veteran employees, may sweeten cash
payouts to encourage the most senior to retire, sources familiar with
the talks said.

The move is being discussed in the face of Ford Motor Co.'s decision
last week to increase retirement incentives by as much as $20,000 from
deals offered two years ago. It also comes as pressure intensifies on GM
to get a deal so it can begin moving out veteran workers and replacing
them with lower-paid new hires.

A landmark cost-cutting labor contract inked three months ago between GM
and the UAW gave the automaker leeway to buy out workers and create a
second tier of wages -- major wins for GM.

The company initially expected to offer buyout packages similar to those
made available in 2006, when retirement-ready workers could take $35,000
to leave the company. A first round of incentives, extended last week to
5,200 workers, mirrored the 2006 deals almost exactly.

But the two sides have yet to strike a deal on offers for the rest of
GM's work force, about 75,000 workers in all. GM and the union are still
negotiating how much cash employees should get to leave and how many
workers need to go.

Deals richer than the 2006 offers are among the options being discussed
as the two sides negotiate an incentive package and try to reach
agreement on which jobs fall into the lower level of pay.

Ford increased its incentives from $35,000 to $50,000 for
retirement-ready production workers and from $50,000 to $70,000 for
skilled trade workers. The Dearborn automaker will extend some form of
buyout to all 54,000 Ford UAW workers; nonretirement packages are
unchanged from the previous offers.

Chrysler LLC is offering workers the same options it extended last year,
when thousands of workers left the automaker.

Industry analysts have said Detroit's Big Three could have a tough time
enticing enough workers to leave the companies now after the mass exodus
created by the last round of buyouts; in total, more than 80,000 workers
left in 2006 and 2007.

Even after 34,000 workers left GM in 2006, about 21,500 remain with 30
years of service.

Many workers are eager to hear what GM's going to offer, said Pat
Sweeney president of Local 5960, which represent's workers at GM's Orion
plant.

"After they hear what Chrysler and Ford rolled out, they ask if they're
going to match," Sweeney said. "I tell them, 'I don't know.' "

GM, the No. 1 U.S. automaker, stands to save billions in labor costs
once that second tier of workers is in place.

In the meantime, losses are mounting in North America and U.S. auto
sales could fall to a 10-year low this year, further threatening the
company's bottom line.

The automaker's share price is down more than 30 percent from a
mid-October peak just after the new labor deal was ratified. Shares
closed Thursday at $28.21.

"We hope to have an agreement in place, but we can't speculate on
timing," GM spokesman Dan Flores said on Thursday about the pending buyouts.

GM CEO Rick Wagoner is under pressure from Wall Street to get those
savings under way. Wagoner last month told Wall Street analysts that the
company planned to extend buyout or early retirement offers in February
to the entire work force.

The labor deal could eventually save GM $5 billion a year in labor
costs. A key aspect of the deal, a plan to shift retiree health costs to
the union in the form of a company-funded trust, won't kick in until at
least 2010. In the meantime, most of the savings will come from hiring
thousands of workers at second-tier wages to work jobs not central to
building cars and trucks. They will make about $14 an hour, compared to
about $28 for a veteran worker in a core vehicle-making job.

Even with those savings, Wagoner said, GM may have to further reduce its
capacity in the face of a sluggish U.S. economy.

Wagoner's comments elicited an angry reaction from UAW President Ron
Gettelfinger, who said hours later that there was no February goal for
the buyout offers.

"Eventually there will be a buyout," Gettelfinger said at the time. "But
I'm not going to put a time frame on it."

GM doesn't have to match the Ford deal; a number of differences already
exist among the labor deals struck by the UAW and each of the Big Three.

But GM needs the offers to be attractive enough to entice workers
without spending so much that the cost savings are negated.

The union also stands to benefit from the buyouts because hiring
second-tier workers could bolster its declining ranks.

"The union's reputation is going to depend on how they negotiate here,"
said Michigan State University labor Professor John Revitte. "At some
point they risk looking weak to potential members. They're walking a
fine line."



--
Civis Romanus Sum

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