Toyota suspends India production as pay dispute drags
Tuesday, 18 March 2014 00:45
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Reuters: Toyota Motor Corp’s Indian unit has temporarily closed its two plants where some workers had stopped production lines to protest a delay in salary hikes after 10 months of negotiations.
The factories near Bangalore are Toyota Motor’s only vehicle plants in the world’s sixth-biggest auto market, where the Japanese manufacturer generates just a sliver of global sales.
Their closure raises the spectre of labour unrest at Indian car plants in recent years, including a 2012 dispute at Suzuki Motor Corp unit Maruti Suzuki India Ltd. A riot left one person dead and over 100 injured, and resulted in a $250 million month-long production loss.
Toyota Kirloskar Motor (TKM), the world’s biggest car maker’s Indian unit, in a statement said some workers over the past 25 days had disrupted business as the management, labour union and local government negotiated wages.
“The company is left with no other option but to declare a lockout of the premises to ensure the safety of its workers and management personnel,” TKM said.
The subsidiary closed the factories on Sunday - a non-production day - and did not state when it will reopen them.
Closure would result in a daily production loss of 700 vehicles, said Toyota Motor spokesman Naoki Sumino in Tokyo.
TKM and the union will continue holding talks to resolve the issue, Sumino said.