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Toyota suspends Indian auto production due to labor unrest

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Toyota said Monday it has suspended production at its two Indian auto assembly plants in response to threats against management and "deliberate" assembly-line stoppages, as efforts to hammer out a labor deal failed.

The world's biggest automaker said the move will see the lock-out of about 6,400 employees at the factories in southern India.

Company and union officials had been trying to sign a new contract for the past 10 months, with the local government helping mediate negotiations.

"In the meantime, under the instigation of the union, certain sections of the employees have resorted to deliberate stoppages of the production line, abuse and threatening of supervisors thereby continuously disrupting business for the past 25 days," Toyota said in a statement.

"All these unlawful activities have been detailed in the lock-out notice. With this background, the company is left with no other option but to declare a lock-out of the premises to ensure the safety of its workers and management personnel," it added.

A Tokyo-based company spokesman said Toyota hoped to restart production quickly. But he could not give a timeline for any re-opening of the plants, which make a range of models including the flagship Camry sedan, the Corolla and the Prius hybrid.

The two factories, near the city of Bangalore, produce about 310,000 units annually, mostly for the domestic market.

The fresh strife comes as Japan looks to boost ties with India to counter-balance China's growing influence in the region. But the experience of Japanese firms in India has not always been rosy.

In a 2012 riot at Maruti Suzuki's Manesar plant near New Delhi saw workers chase supervisors with iron rods, killing a personnel manager and injuring close to 100 other managers.

The riot, which workers' representatives at the time said was caused by unhappiness over wages and working conditions, saw India's leading carmaker by sales lock out workers for a month and cost it some $250 million in lost production.

On Monday, the Toyota spokesman said there had not been any reports of physical abuse of managers or workers at its now-shuttered plants.

"There is a sense of caution among businesses expanding into the Indian market," said Yosuke Miura, analyst at Tokai Tokyo Securities.

"All companies that invest in India take this kind of a risk, to varying degrees. It's tough to know what will come out of this. But what is important for Toyota and others investing in India is to keep up communication with people working at their factories."

Japanese pharmaceutical giant Daiichi Sankyo has struggled with its majority ownership of Indian drugmaker Ranbaxy since buying it in 2008.

Last week, Ranbaxy shares tumbled following news of a second recall of its cholesterol-busting generic drug. The company is already reeling from a string of US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) import bans involving manufacturing safety worries.

The FDA has banned Ranbaxy from sending drugs and ingredients to the United States, its biggest market, from four of its plants for failing to meet "good manufacturing practices".

Earlier this year, Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe went to New Delhi to push for closer commercial and strategic ties with India, as Tokyo seeks to offset Beijing's growing regional might.

Tokyo is a major investor in India, pumping in about $15 billion in the past dozen years and involved in building the Delhi-Mumbai Industrial Corridor, a huge $90-billion project linking India's capital with its financial hub.

Since coming to power in late 2012 Abe has trotted the globe, partly in his self-appointed role as salesman for Japan Inc, but also to seek offset the growing influence globally of China.

© (c) 2014 AFP

©2024 GPlusMedia Inc.

10 Comments
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So sad, Indian mentality , really .

-1 ( +3 / -4 )

"Tokyo is ...involved in building the Delhi-Mumbai Industrial Corridor, a huge $90-billion project linking India’s capital with its financial hub."

Japan and India are providing equal amounts of funding, and that's a massive amount of money. How much of it is Japanese "taxpayers' money," and how much of it will end up actually benefiting US here in Japan.

I'm sure Samsung and others will appreciate having the new improved infrastructure to support their supply chains in India. LOL.

-1 ( +1 / -2 )

Toyota, no more number 1.

0 ( +0 / -0 )

Tokyo is not Japan, Tokyo is one of prefectures in Japan. It has nothing to do with Toyota decision. Toyota has never used Taxpayer money. It got Mitsui Banking System financial support at the beginning when it was Mitsui Toyoda Jidosha Seisakusho, Later it became independent as Toyota. The time was Honda era. Suzuki might move out from India now. Indonesia and other SE Asia countries are eager to have Toyota and Suzuki,

BTW, Hyundai and KIA are pretty good Korean automakers. And Samsung? It hasn';t added automaker or auto supplier business to its computer business.

Beside that, there is no record India invited Samsung. India is interested in buying light weapons from Japan and Abe's sales pitch to India has been successful until now.

SK top hasn't done sales talk with India, etc/

-1 ( +0 / -1 )

Toyota is sitting on record profits and is increasing wages here in Japan. The wage in India is a paltry when compared to the cost of a car sold in India and when compared with of an Indian worker.

The Japanese had to riot in the sixties to get fair wages - will the Indians have to do the same?

2 ( +2 / -0 )

Good luck to Indian laborers who work for Toyota, Suzuki and other automakers. Around time Honda expanded to USA, UAW tried to unionize Japan Inc, but failed. So, cost effective automating systems, GM and Ford could not use and one by one, Japanese automaker branches sprouted in USA. Striking is one step to lose their jobs in auto industry in India. Maybe India will copy China to invite GM and Ford to build plants in India?

-1 ( +0 / -1 )

This is what happens when big business sells out the people in their own country. When the labor gets to high and the stock holder are feeling the pinch to maximize its profits they just pick up and bounce around like nomads looking for cheaper labor, once they get the cheaper labor for peanuts they settle in, until the people realize they are working for peanuts and realizing they want a better life they strike that's when big labor pulls up and go in search of more people to exploit eventually they will run out of countries and people to take advantage of.

0 ( +2 / -2 )

Toyota, Mazda, Honda, etc has cheap labor in Mexico. (To export to USA). Toyota and Suzuki will probably find cheap labors in other SE Asian countries to export to India.

-1 ( +0 / -1 )

The Toyota strike is not an isolated incident. In India, labor unions try to dictate terms to management. Laws tend to be protective of workers, and unions tend to use it to their advantage. You can hire, but you cannot fire. The industry like Toyota are lobbying the government to relax labor contract laws, but so far in vain. The problem is becoming even more pressing as India competes with China. India just cannot afford to build resentment against multinationals and foreign investors.

0 ( +0 / -0 )

How are assembly plants in India, with parts coming from Japan, not benefiting the Japanese worker?

0 ( +0 / -0 )

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