General Motors lays off about 1,000 workers worldwide

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General Motors Lays Off About 1,000 Workers Worldwide
The Chevrolet logo is seen at a new and used vehicles dealership in Palatine, Illinois, © Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
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By Associated Press Reporter

General Motors is laying off about 1,000 workers worldwide, shedding costs as it tries to compete in a crowded global car market.

The workers, mostly white collar, were notified about the decisions early on Friday.

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The company confirmed the layoffs in a statement but gave few details.


 

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“We need to optimise for speed and excellence,” the statement said.

“This includes operating with efficiency, ensuring we have the right team structure and focusing on our top priorities.”

GM and other carmakers have been navigating an uncertain transition to electric vehicles both in the US and worldwide, trying to work out where to invest capital and how fast the switch will happen.

The company has had to develop and update gas-powered models while investing in EV battery and assembly plants as well as minerals and other parts for the next generation of electric vehicles.

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Through September, US new EV sales are up 7.2% to about 936,000, according to Motorintelligence.com.

That is slower growth than the 47% increase in 2023.


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But EV sales this year are likely to surpass last year’s record of 1.19 million, and the EV share of new vehicle sales this year is 7.9%, up from 7.6% last year.

GM has about 150,000 employees worldwide, with the largest group at its technical centre in the Detroit suburb of Warren, Michigan.

The company had 76,000 white-collar workers worldwide at the end of last year.

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Chief financial officer Paul Jacobson said last month that GM is on track to reach its goal of cutting two billion dollars (£1.6 billion) in fixed costs by the end of this year.

Last April, about 5,000 GM white-collar workers at General Motors took the company’s buyout offers, which the carmaker said at the time was enough to avoid layoffs.

The company offered buyouts to white-collar workers with at least five years of service, and global executives who have been with the company at least two years.

At the time GM said it could not completely rule out layoffs in the future, saying that “involuntary separations are not a consideration at this point”.

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