>> ASIAONE / NEWS / LATEST NEWS / BUSINESS / STORY
Staff at struggling German retail giant agree to tighten belts
Sun, Nov 08, 2009
AFP

BERLIN - Employees of the embattled German department store chain Karstadt, owned by the insolvent retail group Arcandor, agreed Saturday to take salary cuts as part of a last-ditch effort to save their jobs.

Staff representatives and Arcandor's judicial administrator agreed on cost cuts of 150 million euros (S$311 million) over three years.

Staff at the loss-making stores notably agreed to give up bonus holidays and 75 percent of their Christmas bonus, said Cornelia Hass, a spokeswoman for the services trade union Verdi.

The cost-cutting plan is to be examined by Arcandor's creditors during a meeting in Essen on Monday and Tuesday.

Verdi has said 17 out of Karstadt's 126 stores remain threatened with closure. The judicial administrator has already declared Arcandor's mail-order subsidiary Quelle bankrupt.

Arcandor filed for bankruptcy protection in June.

 

 

 

 

 
 
STORY INDEX
 
  On the trail of the smart money
   
 
  Staff at struggling German retail giant agree to tighten belts
   
 
  Employees concerned about corporate reputation
   
 
  Best Sourcing scheme gets $3m boost
   
 
  China eyes home demand not exports
   
 
  Sri Lanka buying gold to diversify reserves
   
 
  Japan govt to force JAL pension cuts: media
   
 
  Shell Oil to pay California $26.6 million over violations
   
 
  Berkshire Hathaway's net income triples
   
 
  U.S. jobless rate surges to 10.2%
   
We welcome contributions, comments and tips.
a1admin@sph.com.sg