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Siemens Reportedly Planning Wage Cuts

DW staff (jg)July 13, 2008

German engineering and electronics giant Siemens is reportedly planning to cut the wages of hundreds of employees, as well as slashing 16,750 jobs worldwide -- some 4 percent of its total workforce.

https://p.dw.com/p/EbN1
Peter Loescher, CEO of German conglomerate Siemens walking past a sign saying Siemens
CEO Peter Loescher is the architect of a major restructuring planImage: AP

In particular, the salary of 390 workers not covered by agreements with the metal workers' union will be cut by 10 percent, according to German news magazine Spiegel.

An official from the trade union IG Metall, Heinrich Urban, condemned the "audacity" of the cuts unveiled by Siemens.

Urban said the program would save around 1.2 billion euros ($1.9billion), adding "that's almost as much as has been uncovered so far in the corruption scandal."

Siemens, Germany's third biggest company, has been hit by a corruption scandal involving bribes to secure foreign contracts. Slush funds of 1.3 billion euros have been identified by Siemens.

The company announced the job cuts on Tuesday. Siemens chief executive Peter Loescher is planning to reduce administration and management costs by 1.2 billion euros by 2010.