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发表于 2008-9-13 17:53:41
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Airbus’s outsourcing suffered setbacks earlier this year, when the credit crunch scuppered its plans to sell factories to German and French suppliers. But now Mr Gallois and Tom Enders, the boss of Airbus, are pressing ahead, by taking over the project to build a factory in Tunisia which was going to be built by one of Airbus’s big French suppliers, for example. Mr Gallois also said that production of A320s in China was proceeding because of the need to be close to that huge market; that Airbus and EADS would expand their activity in India because of the supply of good engineering talent there; and that production of aircraft parts would increase in the Maghreb to take advantage of low-cost labour on Europe’s doorstep. Factories in Mexico are also a possibility, especially if EADS eventually wins the controversial air-tanker-refuelling contract from America’s defence department. EADS shares rose 9% this week, helped by the stronger dollar and by Mr Gallois’s plans for extra savings.
French workers may hold noisy protests and demonstrations over job cuts, and the country’s railways and other public services are often wracked by strikes. But in the French private sector, strikes are rarer and seldom last long. And it is Boeing, not Airbus, that now has a strike on its hands. The International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers is one of America’s most powerful unions. Tom Wroblewski, one of its leaders, said this week that the price of a settlement had gone up since his 27,000 members went on strike. But already Boeing has offered 11% phased over three years, with about another 3% in cost-of-living adjustments and one-off bonuses of up to 6% of annual pay. In addition, the company is proposing an eye-watering 14% increase in pensions. |
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