W. German Workers, Employers Agree on 35-Hour Workweek
- Share via
GOEPPINGEN, West Germany — Employers and striking metal workers in a central region of West Germany agreed in a landmark accord today to cut the workweek by two hours in stages to 35 hours, averting the prospect of a potentially damaging nationwide strike.
IG Metall, the Western World’s biggest union, said in a statement that its members in the steel, car and engineering industries in Northern Wuerttemberg-Northern Baden will work a 35-hour week from October, 1995, on.
Chancellor Helmut Kohl’s government had said the country cannot afford a shorter workweek at a time when it needs to finance the costs of German unification.
The reduction in the current 37-hour week will come in two steps with a one-hour cut being introduced from April, 1993. Wages of workers covered by the agreement will be raised 6% from July this year, IG Metall said.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.