Here is what Detroit automakers have to give the UAW to get a deal, experts say

The United Auto Workers and the Detroit Three carmakers could get closer to an agreement sooner than it appears if both sides focus on a few key job provisions, according to some industry observers and insiders.

One issue the union will likely have to accept that it will not win is a 32-hour workweek for 40 hours of pay, according to the people interviewed for this story. But there are other demands the UAW needs to win (a cost-of-living adjustment, for one) if the carmakers want a quick end to the strike and ratification of a tentative agreement, said one person familiar with ongoing contract talks and the union's goals.

"It has to have COLA. The union will not accept any agreement without COLA," said this person, who asked to not be named because of the sensitivity of the bargaining talks. "You will not get an agreement without COLA.”

This person also said, "The 32-hour workweek is not real. It won't happen."

UAW President Shawn Fain walks with dozens of United Auto Workers during a rally outside the UAW-Ford Joint Trusts Center in Detroit on Sept. 15, 2023.
UAW President Shawn Fain walks with dozens of United Auto Workers during a rally outside the UAW-Ford Joint Trusts Center in Detroit on Sept. 15, 2023.

As to COLA, GM has offered a version of it that it dubs "inflation protection" for its highest-paid workers. General Motors has not released the details of the offer, but the Detroit Free Press has learned the basics of it. It would offer a pay increase to match inflation if inflation hit a set percentage. Stellantis has also offered a version of inflation protection and Ford Motor Co. offered a form of COLA several days ago, according to the source. Ford declined to comment, but according to a UAW report the union had "reasonably productive conversations with Ford" on Saturday.

Also, the automakers have offered to reduce the time it takes for employees to progress to the top wage from eight years to four years. But the UAW has said there are no offers yet to end wage tiers, which the union wants.

Those are just a few of the issues the union and Detroit automakers must solve in short order to end a strike before it escalates to a level of severe financial damage to the companies and communities.

Laura Dickerson protests in solidarity alongside Blue Cross United Auto Workers members during a rally in Detroit on Friday, Sept. 15, 2023.
Laura Dickerson protests in solidarity alongside Blue Cross United Auto Workers members during a rally in Detroit on Friday, Sept. 15, 2023.

"If the unions are clever ... with the right mindset, they can win," said Balbinder Singh Gill, assistant professor of finance and labor expert at Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken, New Jersey. "I think carmakers are pressing to find a deal. It depends on the union and what is the line that they cannot go below and it depends on what the companies cannot give them. Then you find the right balance for structuring the deal."

The strike fallout so far

At 11:59 p.m. Thursday nearly 13,000 UAW workers across the three Detroit automakers went on strike at the first wave of plants that the union said it would shut down until a new labor agreement is reached.