BMW staff begin UK strikes over pension dispute

Workers at three British plants of German car giant BMW began a 24-hour strike Wednesday over proposed changes to pensions, leading to a halt in production of the iconic Mini.

Employees belonging to the Unite union picketed at the plants in Cowley and Swindon, in southern England, and in Hams Hall in the centre of the country, with eight more walkouts promised over the next five weeks.

The carmaker said Mini and BMW engine production had stopped for the day as workers protested against the closure of its two final-salary pension schemes for around 5,000 employees in Britain, according to the Press Association.

Going ahead, the value of a worker’s pension would be linked to the pension fund’s performance in the stock market, and not salary.

The carmaker announced the plan last year, and aims to make the change on May 31.

“It is very much the last resort for a world-class workforce that takes great pride in making the iconic Mini and world-renowned Rolls-Royce motor cars and one which could have been avoided if BMW’s bosses had been willing to negotiate meaningfully,” Unite general secretary Len McCluskey said.

The car maker said it regretted the strikes and hoped for further talks. It has called the current pension plans “increasingly unsustainable and unaffordable for both members and companies”.

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pension germany Britain car manufacturer stock market strike Workers BMW cost cutting Mini Cooper salary UK operations workforce

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