PSA Peugeot Citroen on Wednesday announced an EUR800m cost-cutting plan for next year, including up to 5,000 lay-offs amid a stagnating European car market.
“It’s quite possible there will be an impact on the workforce,” the company’s chief financial officer Frederic Saint-Geours warned during a teleconference announcing the plan, news agency AFP reported.
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Management was informing unions on details at meetings on Wednesday, with union leaders already slamming what they said was a “scandalous” plan.
The chairman of PSA’s board of directors Philippe Varin said: “This could concern 10% of the workforce.”
A spokesman clarified that the 10% could come from the around 50,000 people employed in Europe and not linked to production.
The company, France’s largest automaker and Europe’s second-largest after Volkswagen, employs over 205,000 people in the world, including 100,000 in France. It employs 167,000 people in Europe.
The new plan comes on top of a savings programme announced in 2009 that aims to save a total of EUR3.7bn.
The savings plan comes after the company announced that sales in its cars division were down 1.6% to EUR9.3bn (US$12.94bn).
However, overall sales were up 3.5% in the third quarter to EUR13.45bn.
CGT union representative Bruno Lemerle slammed the savings plan as “scandalous.”
“Logically when the results are good, the company should employ people, try to develop,” Lemerle told AFP, pointing to the increased overall turnover figure.
“Our workload is excessive as it is, we don’t need a reduction in the workforce,” he said.
With two huge manufacturers, PSA and Renault, France’s auto industry is key to the country’s economy and accounts for around 10% of the overall workforce.
Industry minister Eric Besson is to meet Varin to discuss the layoffs, his ministry said.
Saint-Geours said the company expected growth in the European market to stabilise, but for sales to grow 7% in China, 6% in Latin America and 30% in Russia.
