Jump to content

Air France To Cut More Than 5,000 Jobs


News_Editor

Recommended Posts

Air France to cut more than 5,000 jobs < br />

2012-06-23 01:04:09 GMT+7 (ICT)

PARIS, FRANCE (BNO NEWS) -- French airline Air France will cut more than 5,000 jobs, or nearly 10 percent of its domestic workforce, by the end of next year in an effort to return to profitability and to regain growth momentum, the company announced on late Thursday.

Alexandre de Juniac, chairman and CEO of the French flag carrier, said the cuts are necessary for the airline to return to profitability and to provide a better customer service. "Air France is facing a fundamental choice about its future," he said. "I have every faith in the success of our plan, which will enable Air France to return to the forefront of the major international airlines."

In an effort to minimize the impact of the job cuts and to avoid conflict with trade unions, the airline hopes it will be able to avoid forced layoffs by encouraging voluntary retirement, voluntary departures, work-sharing and allowing full-time employees to switch to part-time work.

"If we all make the necessary equitably distributed efforts, there will be no forced departures," de Juniac said. "The signature of the agreements in the next few days will involve all Air France staff and will illustrate everyone's determination to put Air France back on the road to recovery."

Under the so-called Transform 2015 plan, the airline will eliminate 5,122 jobs out of a domestic workforce of 49,301 by December 2013. It expects 1,712 of those job cuts will be through natural departures which will not be replaced while the remaining cuts to be made will be divided between 2,056 ground staff, 904 cabin crew and 450 pilots.

In addition to the job cuts, the airline intends to regain growth momentum by making a difference in the quality of its products and services, especially in First and Business class on long-distance flights. "As soon as the agreements are signed, a vast investment program representing several hundred million euros in new cabin facilities will gradually be implemented," the airline said in a statement.

The airline also intends to restructure short and medium-haul operations by the grouping together of Airlinair, Brit Air and Regional operations within a new regional hub, resulting in a 15 percent cost reduction. The airline's subsidiary Transavia France will increase its frequency of existing flights from 2013 and add new routes in France.

The French airline merged with Dutch airline KLM in 2004 to create Air France-KLM SA, but both airlines have retained their brands. The parent company carries more than €6 billion ($7.5 billion) in net debt and reported an operating loss of €597 million ($748 million) in the first quarter on revenues of €5.6 billion ($7.0 billion).

tvn.png

-- © BNO News All rights reserved 2012-06-23

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Wait.. didn't Hollande promise more government spending, more jobs and higher taxes? How can Air France just cut 5,000 domestic jobs when 44% is owned by the French government? Seems criminal.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It would be interesting to know where the cuts will be made. Air France is an international air carrier. Some of the cuts may be made in foreign countries. So the next time to check in for an Air France flight from Berlin and find Lufthansa staff handling the check in, it just might have been subcontracted to them.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It would be interesting to know where the cuts will be made. Air France is an international air carrier. Some of the cuts may be made in foreign countries. So the next time to check in for an Air France flight from Berlin and find Lufthansa staff handling the check in, it just might have been subcontracted to them.

The new report said domestic cuts.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks, I see it says "10 percent of its domestic workforce".

It also says "In an effort to minimize the impact of the job cuts and to avoid conflict with trade unions, the airline hopes it will be able to avoid forced layoffs by encouraging voluntary retirement, voluntary departures, work-sharing and allowing full-time employees to switch to part-time work."

Your point is valid though, about Hollande.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Wait.. didn't Hollande promise more government spending, more jobs and higher taxes? How can Air France just cut 5,000 domestic jobs when 44% is owned by the French government? Seems criminal.

No it's just harsh reality. Hollande talks a good game re a focus on growth for the EU in general but will have to take a more austere route re domestic issues whether that is AF, steel works or car producers that need to be rationalized. France needs to get it's act together during this tough period and party politics takes a back seat now elections are over.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.








×
×
  • Create New...
""