Mexican motor city 'getting desperate' as GM's U.S. strike takes heavy
toll
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[October 12, 2019] By
Dave Graham
SILAO, Mexico (Reuters) - Half a continent
away from the auto plants of Detroit, U.S. strikes at General Motors
(GM) have sent shivers through the central Mexican city of Silao, where
the local GM factory furloughed 6,000 workers last week when parts from
the United States ran out.
Rich or poor, residents are anxiously hoping the labor dispute will end
so the company reopens the plant, which has been an anchor of the local
economy since GM arrived a generation ago, transforming the landscape
forever.
"General Motors is the biggest source of income here. When General
Motors stops, everything stops," said Silao resident Francisco Vazquez.
"Before General Motors, there was nothing."
Once a provincial backwater with a handful of colorful old churches,
Silao is now enveloped in a thick cordon of factories and warehouses
serving automotive companies from all over the world.
In the years after GM opened the Silao plant in 1995, dozens of other
firms followed, such as Volkswagen, Continental and Pirelli. Meanwhile
the city's home state, Guanajuato, drew in plants from carmakers
including Mazda, Honda and Toyota.
Tensions over the future of manufacturing in North America are at the
heart of the mass GM walkout. The debate has pitted U.S. labor advocates
eager to reduce Mexico's cost advantage against Mexican trade unions
fighting to protect local jobs.
In the United States, the average GM assembly employee earns about $30
per hour before tax. By contrast, an assembly worker in Silao with 10
years experience was, until the shutdown, getting about $4.50 per hour
before tax, including benefits like shopping vouchers, according to a
pay-slip he showed Reuters.
When Donald Trump won the 2016 U.S. presidential election, he pledged to
bring back manufacturing jobs lost since the North American Free Trade
Agreement (NAFTA) took effect in 1994. He also vowed to slash illegal
immigration from Mexico.
Yet Silao's labor leaders say moving jobs from Mexico to the United
States will only increase pressure on Mexican workers to migrate.
"It's important to keep jobs in Mexico for the sake of the United
States," said Hugo Varela, the Guanajuato boss of Mexico's CTM trade
union confederation, which represents GM workers. "It's what stops
migration to the United States," he added. "If there aren't jobs here,
people will try to cross."
In addition, the GM strike has Mexican business leaders worried that
industrial unrest could spread here, where the leftist government of
President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has promised to help strengthen
trade unions.
More than a dozen local workers, union officials and contractors of GM
told Reuters their priority was defending local jobs. There has been
little indication that Mexican autoworkers will show solidarity with the
UAW.
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General Motors workers are seen while leaving their shift at the GM
pickup and transmission plant in Silao, Mexico, October 1, 2019.
REUTERS/Sergio Maldonado
EMPTY PARKING LOTS, ODD JOBS
Operations at the GM Silao plant ground to a halt on Oct. 1. Vast parking lots
in front of the cream-yellow building were mostly empty this week. Fast food
sellers set up on the perimeter of the sprawling plant complained business was
bad, and local GM workers said they were trying to make ends meet with odd jobs.
The GM worker with the pay-slip said that during his furlough he was only
receiving 55% of his regular wage. He shook his head when asked if he might
strike to pressure GM for full pay. His chief concern, he said, was to keep his
job - or ensure a proper severance.
"Maybe we'd go on strike if they tried to take the plant away," said the GM
worker, speaking on condition of anonymity because he worried he could be fired
for talking to the media.
The Silao shutdown has sparked temporary layoffs at another GM site in Mexico
and some major suppliers locally, including American Axle & Manufacturing <AXL.N>,
employees said.
In Washington, the GM strike has complicated Trump's push to get Congress to
ratify the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), the trade deal he
brokered to replace NAFTA.
Democratic lawmakers allied with unions are resisting, saying Mexico must do
more to implement tougher labor rules.
U.S. and Canadian unions accuse their Mexican peers of flouting international
standards to undercut them, and hope tougher laws will make Mexico less
attractive to offshoring.
Over the past two decades, Mexican annual automobile output has jumped 165% to
more than 4.1 million according to the International Organization of Motor
Vehicle Manufacturers, lifting Mexico from 11th to 6th place in the global
rankings.
"GETTING DESPERATE"
By July 2019, the automotive industry made up more than 30% of the value of
Mexico's total exports. Some 80% of those are sent to the United States, making
Mexico highly sensitive to U.S. industrial disputes.
The U.S. strike at the No. 1 U.S. carmaker began on Sept. 16, with its 48,000
members of the United Auto Workers (UAW) union seeking more pay and job
security, a bigger share of company profits and protection of healthcare
benefits.
In Silao, fears about the local economy are growing.
Jose Juan Campos, a contractor who said he had worked regularly at the GM plant
from its opening until the strike, said he had never known a stoppage like it
and that the firm was unlikely to take back many workers before Christmas.
"People are getting desperate," he said.
(Reporting by Dave Graham; Additional reporting by Anthony Esposito; Editing by
David Gregorio)
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