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Updated: 2005-06-08 09:08
 
GM plans to cut 25,000 jobs in US  
6月7日,通用汽車董事長兼首席執(zhí)行官里克·瓦格納在股東年會上表示,該公司將在2008年前裁員至少2.5萬人,以達(dá)到每年節(jié)省約25億美元的目標(biāo)。  

GM plans to cut 25,000 jobs in US
Robert Lutz, vice chairman, Global Product Development of General Motors, listens as GM Chairman and Chief Executive Rick Wagoner, not in photo, speaks at the company's annual stockholder meeting in Wilmington, Del., Tuesday, June 7, 2005.(AP)

General Motors is planning to cut 25,000 jobs in the US as it tries to recover from poor performance there.

The US car giant is to shut down parts and assembly plants in an attempt to save $2.5bn (£1.4bn) a year.

The cutbacks were announced by chief executive Rick Wagoner as part of a four-step plan to return the firm to financial health.

The carmaker, the biggest in the US domestic market, made a loss of $1.3bn for the first three months of 2005.

The loss would have been even larger without healthy profits on GM's financial services arm.

The company has already announced plans to cut 12,000 jobs from its European units, including Saab and Opel.

Tuesday's announcement saw GM shares gain 1% to $30.73.

In a "state of the business" speech to investors, Mr Wagoner said his plans could see more than 25,000 jobs disappear by 2008.

The firm's most recent performance had seen GM fall short of its expectations for market share, he acknowledged.

In addition, sales of lucrative sports utility vehicles (SUVs) were flagging in favour of smaller cars on which the firm earns slimmer profits, as high fuel costs hit home.

To recover, he said, GM needed to slim down and strengthen its eight brands with better quality and lower costs.

The plan calls for North American manufacturing capacity to fall from six million units a year to five million.

It also sees a focus in North America on Chevrolet and Cadillac, with the other six marques - GMC, Pontiac, Buick, Saturn, Saab and Hummer - focused on targeted niche markets.

Mr Wagoner also noted GM's high historic healthcare costs - as much as $1,500 per vehicle produced.

GM had been in "intense discussions" with unions for weeks in the hope of reaching a deal on health costs.

Although he warned that the discussions could yet fall apart, he promised to do everything possible - including extending the time devoted to talks - to avoid a breakdown.

Michael Bruynesteyn, an analyst at Prudential Equity Group, said that GM's rate of retirement or natural attrition - when people decide to leave the company - was about 5% annually.

Cutting 25,000 or more hourly jobs would be in line with that 5% rate, Mr Bruynesteyn said.

GM's hourly US workforce totalled 111,000 at the end of 2004.

Despite signs that the US economy is improving, many companies are facing tough times and analysts said there was the threat of further redundancies.

"This may not be the last major job cut announcement we see this year as other companies, including other American automakers, struggle to make a profit," said John Challenger of employment firm Challenger, Gray and Christmas.

Mr Challenger said that the biggest problems facing firms at present were the "escalating health-care costs" and "the cost of providing ongoing health benefits to growing ranks of retirees".

Healthcare, pension and retirement obligations are expected to cost GM as much as $5.6bn this year.

(Agencies)

 

Vocabulary:
 

marque: a name given to a product or service(汽車的型號,牌子)

 

 
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