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  Belgium

With Bart Vannetelbosch*

InBev, More Foam than Jobs

To increase earnings and continue acquiring companies around the globe, the expansion policy of InBev, the largest beer company in the world, includes restructures that are always based on the closing of factories and massive layoffs of workers. This reality is currently affecting Belgium and other countries of Europe. SIREL spoke about this with Bart, leader of CCSA-CSC, Belgium’s largest trade union.

 

-How many workers and how many plants does InBev have in Belgium?

-Right now it has four breweries, plus the distribution centers. It employs a total of 3,000 workers.

 

-What’s behind this restructure that announces nearly 500 layoffs in Belgium and about as many more in four other European countries?

-We believe InBev wants to economize in everything, cutting costs, in order to have more money to buy breweries in other parts of the world, like, for example in China. By maximizing efficiency they want to earn a certain target figure in two years, and to achieve that, the financial equation must be optimum.

Last year they announced a restructure that affected 50 workers -basically personnel employed in computer services- and another involving 235 workers, with the closing of a local and very traditional brewery in Hoegaarden that manufactures a very popular white beer. To these it added the closing of another plant in Brussels. Some weeks ago InBev announced a new restructure, which primarily concerns Liege, laying-off 150 administrative employees and 50 other workers from the computer department, who are going to be outsourced.

Apparently there are two more restructure plans in the region, but management does not want to disclose any details, to avoid a greater impact in Europe and among Belgian workers.

 

-Unions find out about the company’s plans through the media, like the rest of the population. -How do you interpret this methodology?

-We think it’s a strategy deployed by management, which doesn’t want to communicate a clear plan, but rather prefers to implement it gradually, one plant at a time, first with the factory workers and then with the employees, in each country separately, because they understand that in that way they can weaken unions.

 

-I understand that the unions have conducted economic studies and drafted alternative plans in response to these layoff announcements from InBev. What do they consist of exactly?

While three former InBev directors that left their positions last year received 31 million euros -some 37 million dollars- the transnational corporation presses on with its restructure and cost-cutting plans, which will affect the jobs of hundreds of workers and will result in the closing of several plants.

-This week we are going to propose alternatives. We think that the Hoegaarden brewery should not be closed down, but the company has said no. In the next few hours we’ll get together with all the workers to analyze our next steps; we’ll evaluate the possibility of calling a strike to try to keep the Hoegaarden brewery open or, if that fails, of negotiating a welfare plan for the people that are laid off, a plan that is socially acceptable, which will grant them compensations and social security benefits. Those are the two paths that are open right now.

 

-You’re planning an important demonstration for late March.

-Yes, on March 28 we’re holding a large demonstration in Louvain to protest against InBev, a company that in spite of having earned a billion euros in 2005, is firing a great number of people. With the march we want to send out a clearer message to society about the long-term plans management has, and also disseminate our intention of reaching a collective bargaining agreement for all of Europe, which the company refuses to accept. The strategy of management is to prevent unions from joining forces and creating blocs in Europe and in other continents, that is why they are carrying out these restructures gradually, one place at a time.

 

-Is there a good communication between the different European InBev unions? 

-It’s not easy because we all speak different languages. Today the European regional office of IUF is who communicates the problems, and it is coordinating and trying to implement a common strategy.

 

-How does Belgian society react to this state of affairs?

-The company has bad press. The general public doesn’t understand how a company like InBev, with the history it has and the earning it obtains, can fire people like that. Last Friday the 10th, the media announced that three former managers of InBev -among them the company’s CEO John Brock- received 31 million euros from InBev -approximately 37 million dollars- when they stepped down last year. But at the same time they’re firing workers to cut down costs and obtain greater earnings that will enable them to purchase factories in other countries.

 

-Have you identified any actions to be carried out internationally?

-It’s very important to have a good communication among InBev workers throughout the world, like we tried to achieve last year with the conference in Sao Paulo, Brazil. It is vital that workers be aware of what’s happening in other countries to be able to form a bloc against InBev management.

 

Rel-UITA

March 14, 2006

 

* In charge of Research Services of the Christian Food and Services Association (CCAS-CSC). In charge of international relations and collective bargaining agreements in the domestic food sector.

 

 

 

 

  UITA - Secretaría Regional Latinoamericana - Montevideo - Uruguay

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