IG Metall brings German factories to a grinding halt
Employers speak of 'madness' as engineering employees take to streets in
pursuit of a 6.5% wage rise

John Hooper in Berlin
Tuesday May 7, 2002
The Guardian

The first big strikes in Germany for seven years began yesterday, despite
warnings that they could cause Germany's - and Europe's - tentative
economic recovery to wither on the vine.

IG Metall, the country's biggest industrial union, is pressing for a wage
rise of 6.5% for engineering workers at a time when inflation has fallen
to 1.8% and is forecast to drop even further. The settlements the union
achieves are often regarded as benchmarks by negotiators in other sectors,
and economists have warned that any settlement above 3.5% could encourage
the European Central Bank to put up interest rates.

The strikes also have an important political dimension. The chancellor,
Gerhard Schröder, and his Social Democrat party are banking on an
improvement in the economic situation before the general election in
September.

Michael Rogowski, head of the Federation of German Industry, the country's
main employers' body, has described the union's demands as "madness" while
some economists argue that any settlement above 4% threatens more than
100,000 jobs. But IG Metall's leaders have argued that their members
deserve significantly more than inflation because of a moderate deal
reached two years ago.

"We are not on strike against Schröder ... or against anyone," IG Metall's
chairman, Klaus Zwickel, said yesterday. "We are on strike for a good
result."

Pay deals are hammered out region by region in Germany. Yesterday's
strikes focused on the area round Stuttgart, home to many of Europe's
biggest car manufacturers. DaimlerChrysler, Porsche and Audi were all hit.
In the first of a planned series of rolling one-day stoppages, more than
50,000 workers were expected to down tools or stay at home.

Talks broke down last month after the union rejected an offer from the
employers of a 3.3% pay rise over 15 months plus a one-off payment of ?190
(£120), slightly better than the settlement reached by chemical workers.
The union lowered its demand to about 4% during the talks, but reinstated
its full demand after they collapsed.

Outside DaimlerChrysler's main Mercedes-Benz car plant in the town of
Sindelfingen, Jürgen Peters, IG Metall's vice-chairman, began the morning
dancing the conga with workers chanting "6.5%, 6.5%".

Picket lines were established outside some 20 plants. A union statement
said that, by noon, 30,000 workers from night and early shifts had joined
the action. IG Metall said more strikes later this week by 25,000 workers
would target another 50 firms.

Berthold Huber, IG Metall's regional leader, told a crowd outside the
gleaming Porsche plant in the Stuttgart suburb of Zuffenhausen: "The
employers have to stop making workers beg."

Yet for all the sound and apparent fury on both sides, this was shaping up
as a very German strike. IG Metall said it had taken steps to mitigate the
impact on weaker companies and make sure it did not lead to lay-offs among
workers at supplier firms. At Porsche, where the cost in terms of lost
sales was put at ?10m (£6.3m), a spokesman said the company could make it
all up over the next few weeks by boosting production. "A one-day strike
is not a problem for us", he said.

Mr Schröder, anxious not to alienate his party's natural supporters in the
run-up to an election, has expressed little more than mild regret over IG
Metall's campaign.

"I hope there can be a speedy return to the negotiating table and that an
outcome can be reached that is reasonable for the economy but also takes
into consideration the expectations of the employees," he said in an
interview published yesterday.




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