In a significant development, leaders of the United Auto Workers (UAW) approved a tentative deal with Ford, securing substantial wage increases and a series of concessions for its members. This deal represents a triumph for the union, which has been striving to reverse 15 years of concessions in the automotive industry.
Ford Agreement Highlights
The agreement with Ford, announced on Sunday, comes with substantial benefits for UAW members. It includes a pay hike of at least 30% for full-time workers, potentially more than doubling the pay for others. Moreover, Ford’s new deal incorporates USD 8.1 billion in manufacturing investments and could provide workers with up to USD 70,000 in additional pay over the 4-1/2-year life of the contract.
A significant change introduced in the contract is the removal of cost-saving provisions, such as paying workers at component plants less than employees at vehicle assembly lines. Additionally, the new agreement eliminates all lower wage tier plants, a key demand made by UAW President Shawn Fain throughout the negotiations.
Under this deal, temporary workers are expected to more than double their pay, while permanent workers could witness top wage rates increase by more than 30%, reaching USD 42.60 per hour by 2028, including estimated cost-of-living allowances.
In return for these benefits, Ford gains the opportunity to offer an unlimited number of USD 50,000 buyouts to older workers earning the top rate. The company can replace them with younger hires who will earn less than the top wage for three years. Previously, it took new workers eight years to reach the top wage.
The UAW’s Strategy
UAW President Shawn Fain credited the success of the rich contract to the union’s strategy of exerting pressure on Ford through a series of targeted strikes over six weeks. Fain described the deal as a “turning point in the class war that has been raging in this country for the past 40 years” and highlighted the power workers can harness when they are not afraid to use it.
It is noteworthy that the UAW scaled up the strike from smaller plants to Ford’s profitable Kentucky heavy-duty pickup factory, applying similar tactics in negotiations with General Motors (GM) and Chrysler-owner Stellantis, leading to a tentative agreement with the latter.
Terms of the Deal
As part of the contract, Ford will invest in electric vehicles, including adding electric vehicles to existing assembly plants in Louisville and Ohio. This investment includes USD 1.2 billion for the Louisville assembly plant and USD 2.1 billion to build electric vans in Ohio. The UAW also secured agreements covering new battery plants, potentially resulting in thousands of new UAW members at a planned battery plant in Marshall, Michigan, and the Tennessee Electric Vehicle Center, known as Blue Oval City, which Ford is constructing in western Tennessee.
Moreover, Fain announced that once unionized, workers at battery plants would earn the same wages as Ford assembly workers.
The Road Ahead
With the approval of the UAW-Ford contract, union leaders will embark on regional meetings to explain the details to members, who will then vote on its ratification. Meanwhile, negotiations at General Motors continued without reaching a deal. The UAW ordered a walkout at GM’s Spring Hill, Tennessee, engine and assembly plant. Fain and GM CEO Mary Barra were engaged in discussions to find a resolution.
The outcome of these negotiations holds substantial significance for both the automotive industry and its workers, with ripple effects extending to manufacturing operations, cost implications, and the overall landscape of labor relations in the sector.