Thursday, February 12, 2009

Toyota to cut hours, offer buyouts to US workers

DETROIT : Toyota Motor Corp on Thursday offered buyouts to some 18,000 US workers and said it would cut pay for executives and blue-collar workers

in its North American manufacturing operations in response to plunging auto sales.

The Japanese automaker said it would shut down production for additional days in April at plants in the United States , Canada and Mexico . It said it would also cut pay and eliminate bonuses for executives.

The unprecedented cost-cutting steps for Toyota underscored how the world's top automaker and a perennial blue chip in a notoriously volatile sector is struggling amid the worst auto slump in decades.

Toyota said the moves were intended to keep as many of its North American workers on the payroll as possible.

"We hope the new measures will help us adjust while protecting jobs," Toyota Motor Engineering and Manufacturing Vice President Jim Wiseman said.

Toyota is on track to post an operating loss of some $4..95 billion for the fiscal year that ends in March. The loss will be the first group-wide operating loss in Toyota 's 70-year history.

The automaker has cut North American production of top-selling cars such as the Camry and Corolla after sales dropped 15 per cent in 2008 in the United States , Toyota 's largest single market.

It has also suspended work on a new plant in Mississippi , slated to produce its Prius hybrid car beginning in 2010. Rivals Honda Motor Co Ltd and Nissan Motor Co Ltd have also been forced to cut output.

Toyota said the buyout program would not be offered at two plants where its workers are unionized.

Those are the joint venture manufacturing operations it has in California with General Motors Corp and a truck assembly plant in Tijuana , Mexico , the company said.

Toyota spokesman Mike Goss said the automaker expected most of its cost savings would come from the executive pay cuts, lower bonuses, frozen wages and the savings from paying factory workers for a 10 per cent cut in work hours.

"In this economy we don't expect many people to take the exit program," he said.

Such buyout programs have become common in the past three years at US rivals GM, Chrysler LLC and Ford Motor Co.

Both GM and Chrysler, which have received US government funding, are offering incentives to hourly workers to retire or leave the payroll.

Toyota , whose sales fell 34 per cent in January, is also planning to implement a program at some plants that would reduce work hours to 72 from 80 over a two-week period. As a result, workers would be paid 10 per cent less.

The automaker has not yet decided which plants would adopt the new program, Goss said.

Like its rivals, Toyota has been stung by the collapse in US demand for cars and trucks, a downturn that accelerated in October and November amid tightening credit and deepening consumer uncertainty.

US auto sales in January plunged to an annualized rate of 9.5 million, the lowest in 27 years.

Toyota has about 30,000 workers in its North American manufacturing operation.

That includes about 25,000 hourly workers. Toyota 's two Canadian plants employ just over 6,000 workers. Another 1,000 work at its Tijuana plant.

1 comment:

MA. Rayie said...

I think it is sensible that labor will have a share in overcoming the financial crisis, which is to agree momentarily in salary reduction to keep the company afloat until such time that things normalize.