Why GM is laying off more workers amid healthy profits

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GM CEO Mary Barra.
Enlarge / GM CEO Mary Barra.
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GM is laying off another 4,000 workers, the company acknowledged on Monday. The cuts are on top of thousands of job cuts the company announced last November.

Those earlier cuts were concentrated on the factory floor, with GM shuttering five manufacturing plants in the United States and Canada. The new cuts, by contrast, are to salaried white-collar jobs. Individual workers will be notified over the next two weeks, the company said.

GM has reported billions of dollars of profits over the last three quarters. But CEO Mary Barra argues that GM still needs to cut its costs to prepare for the dramatic changes facing the automotive industry in the coming years.

In a November press release announcing the previous round of job cuts, Barra wrote that layoffs would “continue our transformation to be highly agile, resilient and profitable, while giving us the flexibility to invest in the future.”

The auto industry is facing two potentially transformational changes to automotive technology: electrification and autonomy. GM has invested heavily in both trends. GM has developed electric vehicles like the Bolt. And in 2016 it acquired the self-driving startup Cruise—now viewed as a leading developer of autonomous vehicle software.

These new technologies will require engineers and other professionals with different skills, and GM has continued to hire new personnel even as it prepared for this week’s layoffs.

GM’s leading American rival, Ford, has also been looking to trim its workforce. The company acknowledged vague plans for job cuts last October. Ford is expected to lay off thousands of European workers over the course of 2019. Ford let around 400 American workers go last month; it’s not clear if Ford will make further cuts in North America this year.

Update: A GM spokesman argues that these aren’t newly announced cuts, since the company’s November press release stated that “actions are being taken to reduce salaried and salaried contract staff by 15 percent.” But new details about the timing and number of layoffs were announced this week.

https://arstechnica.com/?p=1451517