portal
  Home About us Reports Charts News Custom Company Scan  
Report Charts News
*
Title Content
Economy&Goods
  Economy
  ConsumerGoods
  Food&Beverage
  Agriculture
Life Sciences
  Biotechnology
  Medical
  Pharmaceutical
Manufacturing
  Automotive
  Chemical
  Energy
  Machinery
  Material
  Metals & Minerals
Public Sector
  Environment
  Finance Service
  Infrastructure
  Logistics
  Real Estate
  Retailing
  Tourism
  Training
Technology And Media
  Electronics
  Internet
  Hardware
  Media
  Software
  Telecommunications

Tel: 0086-10-82600828
Fax: 0086-10-82601570
Email:


 Peugeot-Citroen job cuts plan panned
 
CreateTime:2012-07-16     Source:shanghaidaily.com Editor:qulina
Text Size:       
 

FRENCH Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici says a plan from French carmaker PSA Peugeot-Citroen to eliminate thousands of jobs goes too far and the number of job cuts must be reduced.

Moscovici refused to get into the details of what the government would be asking for, but said yesterday the state has "levers" it can deploy in negotiations. He said the government's goal would be to reduce the number of jobs eliminated.

On Saturday, French President Francois Hollande denounced the plan by carmaker PSA Peugeot-Citroen to cut 8,000 jobs as unacceptable, and said it must be renegotiated.

The struggling French carmaker announced the cutbacks on Thursday, along with its intention to close a major factory north of Paris. Employees staged a protest the same day, and unions are calling for more.

In his Bastille Day interview on French television, Hollande said the plan was a "shock" for workers, their families and their communities.

He said the "plan is not acceptable as it stands and therefore it will not be accepted."

Hollande, who took office in May, said the government wants an expert to assess Peugeot's finances and make recommendations for the company. He added the government would soon unveil a plan for the car industry, including incentives to buy French-made cars.

Hollande campaigned for the presidency on a promise to "re-industrialize" France, reinvigorate its manufacturing sector and prevent jobs from going to Asia. Sorting out France's car industry may be his first big test on that front.

Peugeot-Citroen, like its peers, is struggling, warning that it faces a first-half loss of 700 million euros (US$850 million) this year. The company wants to save 1 billion euros as it tries to compete in Europe's stagnant car market. It is suffering particularly amid a slump in sales in the recession-hit south of Europe, and saw sales plunge 20 percent in Europe in the first quarter.

But Hollande wouldn't let the wider European economy take all of the blame for Peugeot's troubles. He said the company shares responsibility and criticized its management for holding back the cost-cutting plan until after he took office, saying the delay amounted to a lie.


Related Reports
Automotive Cockpit Domain Controller Research Report, 2024
Chinese OEMs (Passenger Car) Going Overseas Report, 2024--Germ...
Analysis on DJI Automotive’s Autonomous Driving Business, 2024
BYD’s Layout in Electrification, Connectivity, Intelligence an...
Great Wall Motor’s Layout in Electrification, Connectivity, In...
2005-2021 www.researchinchina.com All Rights Reserved 京ICP备05069564号-1