Toyota workers in India continue strike

Strike Toyota Kirloskar factory India
Strike Toyota Kirloskar factory India

A strike by Indian workers at a Toyota Kirloskar auto factory near Bangalore bear a striking resemblance to the strike of Honda workers in Foshan, China in the spring of 2010 that set off a strike wave in Guangdong of auto workers at other companies (like Toyota), as well as electronics and even brewery workers. Confirming Beverly Silver's research on patterns of labor unrest, there have already been militant strikes at automakers Hyundai, Honda, Mahindra & Mahindra, and Maruti Suzuki in India.

Submitted by Supply Chain R… on March 31, 2014

News story from March 27, 2014

[quote=Wall Street Journal]BANGALORE, India—Most of Toyota Motor Corp.'s Indian employees refused to return to work this week, the latest example of workers demanding more from global auto makers as they push into emerging markets.

The union at Toyota's twin factories outside this southern city said its 4,200 members remain on strike as they await a better deal on wages, holidays and housing. The union also is demanding that the Japanese auto maker reinstate employees who were suspended last week.

Toyota locked out workers on March 16, saying they were disrupting production and threatening managers. The company suspended 30 workers who it said were the most disruptive. Toyota lifted the lockout this week but said each employee had to sign a guarantee of good conduct.

Most union workers at the Indian unit, Toyota Kirloskar Motor Pvt., haven't signed the document. That has forced the auto maker to operate here without union laborers, who make up around 65% of its India workforce.

"I expect both parties to sit together and discuss the issues before it escalates further," said Anil Sharma, a senior research analyst at IHS Automotive. "But if it drags on beyond a month, then Toyota stands to lose big time."

The dispute between Toyota and its workers in India has been simmering for months and offers a glimpse into the shaky relationship between industrial workers and management in India.

Most of the disputes have been resolved through negotiations, though some have festered and turned violent. Korea's Hyundai Motor Co., Japan's Honda Motor Co. and India's Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd. have been affected by labor strife here. Two years ago, workers at a Maruti Suzuki India Ltd. factory set fire to one of its two plants, killing a manager.

Auto makers are pushing back against demands for higher salaries to keep a leash on costs in an increasingly competitive but sluggish Indian market.

"Workers are demanding more wages because the cost of living has gone up," said Abdul Majeed, a partner at Price Waterhouse, the Indian arm of PricewaterhouseCoopers. "But management also needs to keep a tight control on costs as the auto market in India is facing one of its toughest years."

Toyota's Bangalore factories produced 570 vehicles a day before the labor strife. The company, the world's biggest auto maker by volume, declined to say how many vehicles it is producing without the workers.

Toyota Kirloskar—of which Toyota owns 89% stake and India's Kirloskar Group owns the rest—manufactures Etios, Corolla, Camry and other models at the two plants. The facilities have a combined workforce of about 6,400.

India accounts for 1.6% of Toyota's global sales. But global auto makers have forecast that the country will become the world's third-largest market in the next five to seven years, behind China and the U.S.

Toyota, the fifth largest auto maker in India, already was in a slump here. Its sales fell 17% to 120,605 vehicles for the past 11 months. Industrywide, India sales declined 5.9% to 2.26 million passenger vehicles over the same period.

The company's workers are demanding more holidays, company housing and raises of up to 4,000 rupees, or about $65, a month. The company has offered raises of up to 3,050 rupees.

"Whenever it makes a good profit in a year, it shifts all the profit to the headquarters, that is Japan," said Satish Rangaswamy, the union's general secretary. "Why can't they share it with our employees?"

He said the union is willing to sign the so-called code on good conduct on behalf of members but that the demand for individuals to sign the code was unacceptable.

While some union workers have signed the document and returned to work, Toyota is building cars with nonunion employees, mostly supervisors and engineers, said Toyota Kirloskar Vice Chairman Shekar Viswanathan.

"If we increase the salary too much, then it will affect the rest of our ecosystem of suppliers and in the end, we may have to pay more for our parts, which will increase our costs," making Toyota less competitive, he said.

The company has offered workers a fair wage increase, up from a previous offer of 2,650 rupees a month, while managers' wages have been frozen, he said. "If we increase the salary too much, then it will affect the rest of our ecosystem of suppliers and in the end, we may have to pay more for our parts, which will increase our costs," making Toyota less competitive, he said.

Separately, Toyota announced plans to spend as much as $3.5 billion to buy back 1.89% of its own shares. The share repurchase would be Toyota's first in six years, prompted by a rebound in earnings.[/quote]

Comments

ajjohnstone

10 years 8 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by ajjohnstone on April 1, 2014

Also reported here
http://www.socialismoryourmoneyback.blogspot.com/2014/03/toyota-strike-and-scourge-of-contract.html

Saqib Rafique

10 years 7 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Saqib Rafique on April 1, 2014

Did he use the word 'Ecosystem';Don't make me laugh! Well, Shekar can afford to pay from his bleeding pocket(as a charity), which won't disturb the system.Whatever they do workers should use their position to the most and where are those 'Smart People' of Banglore ,would they like to join these workers! Thanks to these workers for standing up for all of us !

Soloman Mandy

9 years 7 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Soloman Mandy on April 1, 2015

I wonder after hearing such things as an automobile company hire number of people to give them employment and the same company somehow unable to fulfill the demands of the employees up to certain extent resulted in employees mass strikes. It is really a shameful and irritating thing for any vehicle manufacturing company.

This article someway deals with the same and we all know that how much popular is Toyota in Sub-Continent. So, most probably the market standard of Toyota every year going well and that you can see also. You can find most of people using Toyota cars and SUVs. Anyways, such things as mentioned in the article quite a bit disturbing and big let down if you think from a Labor's prospective.

You mentioned about Eco-system and am pretty sure that most the cars are really big threat to the environment. Electric vehicles and some clean diesel engine or bio-diesel vehicles are not that much worry for the environment and EVs are also smoke free we all know. As you find here http://www.slideshare.net/europeanservicecenter/known-issues-in-higher-mileage-european-cars-41853584 some pure quality diesel engine cars and other vehicles making huge impact on environment in a wrong way and also other prime aspects that cost a lot to vehicle users these days. So, a car manufacturing company should lunch quality automobile products instead of all these.