General Motors’ recent move to suspend the 401(k) match for its 36,000
salaried workers may be an attempt by the Detroit automaker to ease negotiations
with the United Auto Workers.
On December 15, the company announced that effective January 1, it is
freezing its 401(k) match and reducing sever ance benefits to salaried workers
in an attempt to cut costs. GM has announced that it plans to reduce its
workforce by 7 percent in 2006.
"This is in direct response to business conditions, and that is why we are
emphasizing that this is temporary," GM spokesman Robert Herta says. "We will
continue to monitor the business and look to when we can reinstate the
match."
Herta declines to comment on how much GM expects to save from the move. The
company also is not providing details of the severance benefit cuts.
GM’s match had been 20 cents for every dollar contributed by the employee, up
to 6 percent of a worker’s base salary. The automaker had decreased the match in
April from 50 cents for every dollar contributed by the employees.
The firm’s move comes as GM wrangles with the UAW over job cuts, retiree
health care and pension benefits.
"This certainly could play well into their negotiating hand with the UAW, to
the extent that they can show that they are imposing additional burdens on
salaried workers," says Marick Masters, a business professor at the University
of Pittsburgh. "Now they can say, ‘Look, this burden is being shared by all of
the company, not just the hourly workers."
Ford Motor Co., which is also in tough negotiations with the UAW over job
cuts and benefits, made a similar move in July when it suspended its 401(k)
match for its 40,000 U.S. salaried workers.
But observers are skeptical about whether cutting these benefits will make
negotiations with the union any easier.
"It does show that they are finally really hurting, says Ruth Milkman, a
professor of sociology and director of the Institute of Industrial Relations at
UCLA. "But it seems too little, too late, and I think the autoworkers will see
that."
Paul Krell, a UAW spokesman, says the union recognizes the gesture that GM is
making by suspending the match, "but at the same time we have a responsibility
to our members at GM, and we will do everything we can to fully represent their
interests."
The effects that this action will have on employee morale may undermine any
potential cost savings the company sees from the move, says Jim Gillette,
director of supplier analysis at CSM Worldwide, a Detroit-based automotive
forecasting firm.
"These white-collar workers are powerless—they don’t have the UAW, so they
just have to take it," he says. "But they aren’t happy now, and this is just
adding to the misery over there."
GM is "working very closely with our leaders to help our people understand
what we need to do to focus the business," Herta says. "This is something we
need to do to make us competitive."
—Jessica Marquez