Workers launch strikes as Germany frets over industrial future

By Maria Martinez and Matthias Williams

BERLIN (Reuters) -Thousands of German workers launched nationwide strikes to press for higher wages on Tuesday, compounding problems for companies worried about staying globally competitive as high costs, weak exports and foreign rivals chip away at their strengths.

The strikes by unionised workers in the nearly four-million strong electrical engineering and metal industries hit companies such as Porsche AG, BMW and Mercedes.

Also this week, car giant Volkswagen could announce plans to shut three plants on home soil for the first time in its 87-year history, as well as mass layoffs and 10% wage cuts for workers who keep their jobs.

A worsening business outlook in Europe's largest economy has piled pressure on Chancellor Olaf Scholz's rickety coalition government, which could be on the verge of collapse ahead of federal elections next year as policy cracks widen.

Scholz hosted a meeting with business leaders on Tuesday, including Volkswagen boss Oliver Blume, to discuss strategies for bolstering Germany's industrial sector.

The three-hour closed-door meeting in Berlin was aimed at exploring policy measures to drive growth, protect industrial jobs, and reinforce Germany’s position as a global industrial hub, government spokesperson Steffen Hebestreit said in a statement.

The talks mark the beginning of a broader initiative by the German government, with follow-up discussions planned for Nov. 15, Hebestreit added.

In a sign of government dysfunction, his finance minister has also announced a separate summit on the same day.

Germany has a long history of so-called "warning strikes" during wage negotiations, but they come at a time of employers' deepening concerns about the future. A leading business group said a survey of companies pointed to Germany experiencing another year of economic contraction in 2024 and no prospect of growth next year.

"We are not just dealing with a cyclical, but a stubborn structural crisis in Germany," said Martin Wansleben, managing director of the German Chamber of Commerce and Industry (DIHK)that conducted the survey.

"We are greatly concerned about how much Germany is becoming an economic burden for Europe and can no longer fulfil its role as an economic workhorse," he said.

A separate survey by the VDA auto industry association suggested the transformation of the German car industry could lead to 186,000 job losses by 2035, of which roughly a quarter have already occurred.

"Europe - especially Germany - is losing more and more international competitiveness," the VDA report said. It said German companies paid up to three times more for electricity than their U.S. or Chinese rivals, while facing higher taxes and increasing bureaucratic burdens.