Bosch threatens second lockout as workers remain adamant
March 11th, 2010 - 8:29 pm ICT by IANS ( Leave a comment )Bangalore, March 11 (IANS) Automotive components major Bosch Ltd Thursday threatened to declare lockout at its main plant in the city as its agitated workers remained adamant over wage revision and healthcare benefits.
“We have served notice to the employees and their union to either restore normalcy or face lockout even at the Audugodi plant any time,” Bosch vice-president Soumitra Bhattacharya told reporters here.
Mico Karmika Sangha (Mico Trade Union) general secretary K.N. Umesh told IANS that the company threatened to declare lockout at its main plant March 15 despite workers holding reconciliation talks with the management through the labour commissioner on the issues of dispute, including providing healthcare benefits to the employees and their families.
“The company declared lockout unilaterally at Naganathapura facility late Monday without serving the mandatory notice to us. Now it is threatening to close the Audugodi plant where about 2,400 people are working, instead of responding to our fair demands,” Umesh said.
The 57-year-old Indian subsidiary of the German behemoth has been embroiled in a running battle with the union representing about 3,500 employees working at its two plants in this tech hub since January 2009 over a new wage accord after the previous accord expired December 31, 2008.
Bosch India manufactures spark plugs, alternators and generator starters for the Indian automotive industry and exports to its parent group firms worldwide.
“Even after 13 rounds of discussions during the last 14 months, the management has refused to meet our demands, which is based on the consumer price index (CPI) and high profit the company made in fiscal 2008 and 2009 despite slowdown,” Umesh recalled.
After final round of talks failed last month, the workforce at both the plants have been on a go-slow agitation since Feb 12, demanding an average Rs.15,000 hike in their wages per month in view of the rising inflation and high cost of living in an expensive city like Bangalore.
“The management initially offered a measly Rs.500 hike after the three-year wage accord of 2005 expired by 2008 and raised it up to Rs.2,800 subsequently — though in the Bosch group worldwide, it is only the Indian subsidiary that has been consistently making profits every year, while other plants in the overseas have been reporting losses,” Umesh pointed out.
Bhattacharya said the company was incurring a loss of Rs.4 crore (Rs.40 million) since Tuesday when lockout was declared at Naganathapura plant where about 1,000 people are employed.
“More than us, the automobile industry comprising OEMs (original equipment manufacturers) and ancillary units is estimated to lose Rs.1,000 crore (Rs.10 billion) in combined turnover if lockout at Naganathapura continues and if we are forced to declare lockout at Audugodi,” Bhattacharya noted.
Umesh, however, said: “We were patient and restrained from going on strike or tool down for over 12 months as did not want to disrupt production at a time when the industry was reeling under global recession and slowdown in the Indian economy. When orders picked up during the third and fourth quarter of 2009, our workers exceeded production targets up to 130-140 percent.”
Noting that production declined by 40 percent this week and sales valued at Rs.120 crore (Rs.1.2 billion) were hit, the company said it was unfortunate the workforce had resorted to go-slow and tool down when the order book was looking up following a revival in the automobile sector during the last three months.
Bosch’s OEMs include Maruti Suzuki, Mahindra & Mahindra, Tata Motors, Ford, Ashok Leyland, Kirloskar, Hyundai and TVS Motors.
“We are willing to lift the lockout at Naganathapura, provided the employees restore normalcy and agree to production schedule,” Bhattacharya added.
Of the four major plants in the country, the two Bangalore plants account for 55 percent of the company’s production and sales turnover, which was Rs.4,750 crore (Rs.47.5 billion) in calendar year 2009.
The other two plants are at Nashik in Maharasthra and Jaipur in Rajasthan.
- Bosch defers lockout at main plant, wage talks on - Mar 12, 2010
- Bosch lifts lockout following truce with labour (Lead) - Mar 13, 2010
- Bosch settles wage dispute with workers' union - Mar 24, 2010
- Lockout in Bosch plant as staff strike for wage hike - Mar 09, 2010
- Huge forex loss hits MindTree net in fiscal 2010-11 - Apr 21, 2011
- German executive Albert Hieronimus new MindTree chairman - Apr 01, 2011
- Labour strike forces Bosch shut Bangalore plant - Sep 30, 2011
- Kalam unveils Bosch research centre at IISc - Nov 08, 2011
- Strong growth prompts Bosch to invest more in India (Lead) - Jun 02, 2011
- Bosch to invest Rs.2,200 crore to ramp up production - Jan 04, 2012
- Bosch Automotive to supply brake solutions for Tata Nano - Jun 10, 2009
- Bosch India net up 45 percent on robust growth - Mar 01, 2011
- Bosch group to invest Rs.2,500 crore in India - Jun 02, 2011
- Striking Comstar Automotive workers plan fast - Aug 19, 2011
- Regency Ceramics declares lockout at Yanam unit - Feb 01, 2012
Tags: automotive components, behemoth, bhattacharya, consumer price index, general secretary, group firms, healthcare benefits, index cpi, indian subsidiary, labour commissioner, lockout, mandatory notice, normalcy, parent group, reconciliation talks, sangha, spark plugs, umesh, wage accord, wage revision