Britain
Jaguar Land Rover
Eliminates 5,000 Jobs
The last Land Rover Defender coming off the
production line at
Solihull
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Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) has announced it will cut
up
to 5,000 jobs in Britain,
particularly in sales and administrative roles, amounting to one
in
eight of its current British workforce of 40,000.
The job cuts are part of a $4.3-billion
"cost-cutting plan" in the
wake of publishing a $155-million loss in
September 2018.
They come on
top of previous cuts since 2017, when 1,000 agency
staff were
laid off
in Solihull. One hundred and eighty agency workers also lost
their jobs
at Halewood in Merseyside. In
the last three months of 2018, Birmingham's Castle Bromwich
plant
saw a
three-day week affect 1,000 workers.
The company, owned by monopoly Tata, produced
nearly 440,000 Land
Rovers and over 170,000 Jaguar cars in the previous
financial
year,
realizing a revenue of $44.5 billion. In no sense can such a
productive
force as the JLR workforce be said to be a "cost." Only the
narrow view
of capital-centred accounting, which
fails to view the business as part of the interconnected
socialised
economy and sees only the particular firm's shareholders' bottom
line,
can present such a colossal amount of value as a loss.
Rather, the continuing all-sided economic and
political
crisis is
affecting car production and hitting JLR, in what has been
described as
a "perfect storm." The economic crisis is general, at heart of
which is
increased productivity from ever-more advanced techniques leading
to a
falling rate of profit, along with factors such as disparities
between production and consumption. JLR has been hit by a
nearly 50 per
cent drop in sales as the company's biggest and most profitable
market,
China, has shrunk sharply recently, due in part to China's trade
war
with the U.S.
It reflects the crisis that large monopolies are
carrying out
restructuring programmes, moving capital to where labour and
resources
are cheapest, carrying out productivity measures and pulling
political
levers in order to compete in shrinking markets.
JLR has also been particularly affected by a
collapse
in demand for
diesel cars in Britain and across Europe. This is a specific
problem
for the firm, as 90 per cent of its vehicles are
diesel-powered,
although it has been investing in new electric and hybrid
vehicles such
as the all-electric Jaguar "I-PACE." The industry has put its
weight
into lobbying the government over environmental legislation,
insisting
that cleaner diesel is part of the solution. The Land Rover EU6
diesel
exempted from the proposed charges in Ultra Low Emission
Zones.
One of the production lines at the
Jaguar
Land Rover plant.
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Uncertainly over Brexit and other potential
problems in
Europe are
also cited. Tata has been manoeuvring extensively with its steel
and
automotive investments and has sought to lobby against a "Hard
Brexit,"
warning a "no-deal" would cost the company over $2 billion
per
year.
Regardless, it is clear that free movement of capital exists
in Britain, the EU and the rest of the world where there is
unrestricted power of the monopolies and multinationals to
operate at
will. JLR has tried to bypass Brexit for access to the EU Single
Market
by transferring production of the Land Rover Discovery to
Slovakia,
with plans to hire up to 3,000 workers there, while
investing
heavily
in
China, where it has hired 4,000 workers since 2014.
Unions
are
demanding to know whether JLR is permanently scaling back
production in
Britain.
Workers see through the company's propaganda and
excuses for
capitalist market failures. As always, large plants like Castle
Bromwich will defend their right to a livelihood and resist such
measures that jeopardize jobs as they have had to do in the face
of
such threats in the past. They refuse to accept the brunt, or the
entirety, of Tata's
global cost-cutting and restructuring. Workers and unions will be
seeking talks with the company over the deteriorating situation
caused
by the company in the context of the ongoing and deepening global
capitalist crisis.
This article was published in
Number 3 - January 31, 2019
Article Link:
Britain: Jaguar Land Rover
Eliminates 5,000 Jobs
Website: www.cpcml.ca
Email: [email protected]
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