- The UAW is negotiating new four-year contracts with Ford, GM, and Stellantis.
- Talks between the Detroit 3 and the UAW come amid a backdrop of a strengthening labor movement.
- UAW President Shawn Fain isn’t ruling out a strike, potentially at more than one company.
The automotive industry’s labor union, the United Auto Workers, is gearing up for a fight with Detroit’s Big Three car companies this summer and fall.
Ford, GM, and Stellantis (the owner of Chrysler and Jeep) returned to the bargaining table this month to hash out a new four-year agreement with the UAW, which is under new leadership following a yearslong federal investigation into financial corruption.
The fate of about 150,000 union-represented workers at the Big Three hangs in the balance as the two sides hash out the future of work in an increasingly electrified industry that will likely see less and less internal-combustion engine production and more battery production.
The talks come amid the backdrop of a newly emboldened labor movement across the country, with several high-profile strikes and organizing pushes in the entertainment, food, and retail industries. UAW President Shawn Fain, who was elected by a narrow margin in March, is leaning into this labor movement, eschewing long-standing traditions like ceremonial handshakes with the automotive CEOs in favor of connecting with his members.
He’s taken to Facebook Live in recent months to speak directly to his members, preparing them for a potential strike.
“We have to be able to do whatever we have to do if you want to have these gains. The companies aren’t going to freely give it,” Fain said in June.
Escalating tactics at the UAW predate Fain. In 2019, at the height of the union’s corruption scandal, the UAW initiated a 40-day strike at GM’s more than 30 US factories. The work stoppage helped the union notch wins on wages and job security, even as the company won the ability to close several factories. In the end, GM lost some $3.6 billion due to the strike.
The union, which also covers workers in other industrial industries and some academic institutions, has also had high-profile work stoppages at John Deere in 2021 and the University of California in 2022. Fain has said he is not ruling out a strike in this round of talks, potentially at more than one company.
Electric vehicles will change things
This is the first round of negotiations between the Detroit car companies and the UAW in which electric vehicles will be front and center. EVs were an undercurrent in the 2019 negotiations, but since then the segment has grown exponentially and companies like Ford and GM have made firm commitments to build more EVs, which require less labor.
The car companies will be looking for more flexibility to respond to changes in demand for EVs, which is already creating headaches for companies like Ford. The UAW will be looking for assurances that their work will be protected even as it changes, and that wages will continue to improve even as the companies look to remain competitive with EV-makers like Tesla who use cheaper non-union labor.
Then there is the issue of powertrain production. At GM, an Ultium battery plant has taken the place of Lordstown Assembly, which closed after the 40-day strike in 2019. The labor force there is not UAW-represented. Ford is building a new EV campus in Tennessee, which is also not yet unionized.
As the industry moves away from historically unionized engine production and toward new battery plants that have not yet been unionized, the topic of job security will be at the forefront of EV talks.
Labor costs are small, but the only thing in the company’s control
The cost of labor only accounts for roughly 5% of the cost of building a vehicle, but it’s the only part of vehicle production costs that companies can exert control over. This small piece of the pie is going to be even more important for companies to control in the next four years as commodity costs become more difficult to predict.
The average labor costs for the Detroit Three heading into contract talks four years ago hovered between $55 and $60 per hour. After the agreements in 2019, the Center for Automotive Research forecasted labor cost increases between 13% and 20%. That average includes wages and benefits.
While it’s unlikely that the companies will be able to bring these costs down, they will be looking for ways to keep them from going up too much. However, some estimates based on what the UAW has won outside the automotive industry in the last four years put potential increases in labor costs between 25% and 30% over the next four years.
Negotiations formally began at all three companies last week. The current contracts are set to expire September 14.
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