Detroit Sets Its Future on a Foundation of Two-Tier Wages

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/13/business/in-detroit-two-wage-levels-are-th
e-new-way-of-work.html?_r=1
<http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/13/business/in-detroit-two-wage-levels-are-t
he-new-way-of-work.html?_r=1&nl=todaysheadlines&emc=tha2>
&nl=todaysheadlines&emc=tha2

DETROIT - They are a cornerstone of Chrysler
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/business/companies/chrysler_llc/index.ht
ml?inline=nyt-org> 1
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ote-1> 's unlikely comeback: 900 employees turning out a Jeep Grand Cherokee
<http://autos.nytimes.com/2011/Jeep/Grand_Cherokee/254/2916/326458/researchO
verview.aspx?inline=nyt-classifier> 2
<http://www.readability.com/articles/ppt0fdmi?legacy_bookmarklet=1#rdb-footn
ote-2>  sport utility vehicle every 48 seconds of the working day at an
assembly plant here. 

Nothing distinguishes them from other workers at the Jefferson North plant,
except their paychecks. The newest workers earn about $14 an hour; longtime
employees earn double that. 

With the economy slumping and job creation once again a pressing issue in
the White House
<http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/09/12/obama-pleads-for-congress-to-
approve-jobs-bill/?hp> 3
<http://www.readability.com/articles/ppt0fdmi?legacy_bookmarklet=1#rdb-footn
ote-3>  and Congress, the advent of a two-tier wage system in Detroit is
spiking employment for one of the country's most important manufacturing
industries. The new jobs, which are seen as long term, are being watched
closely by economists, executives in other industries and Washington policy
makers eager to increase employment in manufacturing and other areas. 

For many, the opportunity for steady employment is welcome, even at a lower
wage and with no certainty when it might increase. 

"Everybody is appreciative of a job and glad to be working," said Derrick
Chatman, who makes $14.65 an hour putting tires on Jeeps after being laid
off at Home Depot, working odd construction jobs and collecting
unemployment. 

What was once seen as a desperate move to prop up the struggling auto
industry is now considered an integral part of its future. The demand for
$14-an-hour manufacturing jobs is providing Detroit's Big Three automakers
with a ready pool of eager new employees. Last year, Chrysler was flooded
with inquiries about the jobs here. It froze the list after receiving 10,000
applications. 

The companies say the two-tier wages are paying off. Despite the disparity,
there is no appreciable difference in the Grand Cherokees produced on the
shift dominated since last fall by the lower-paid workers, the plant manager
says. At General Motors, savings from its two-tier workers are crucial to
production that began last month of an inexpensive, subcompact car
<http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/13/business/with-chevrolet-sonic-gm-and-uaw-
reinvent-automaking.html> 4
<http://www.readability.com/articles/ppt0fdmi?legacy_bookmarklet=1#rdb-footn
ote-4>  in suburban Detroit. 

Two-tier wage systems have been tried in the airline industry and others
with spotty success. Usually the lower wages disappear rather quickly when
the economy picks up. But the arrival of vastly different wage rates in auto
factories is a seminal event in an industry long influenced by a powerful
union devoted to equal pay regardless of seniority. 

"This is not going away," said Kristin Dziczek, a labor analyst at the
Center for Automotive Research in Ann Arbor, Mich. "It has allowed the Big
Three to reduce labor costs without cutting the pay of incumbent workers. Is
it good for the health and competitiveness of the companies? Yes. And is
that good for job security? Yes." 

Four years ago, the United Automobile Workers
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/u/united_
automobile_workers/index.html?inline=nyt-org> 5
<http://www.readability.com/articles/ppt0fdmi?legacy_bookmarklet=1#rdb-footn
ote-5>  agreed to allow Chrysler, G.M. and Ford to pay lower wages to new
hires to help close the cost gap with foreign carmakers. Now the two-tier
arrangement is at the forefront of labor talks between the U.A.W. and the
Detroit companies. 

The union's president, Bob King, has made an increase in entry-level wages a
top priority in negotiations for a new national contract to replace the
current agreement, which expires Wednesday. 

So far, about 12 percent of Chrysler's 23,000 union workers earn the lower
wage, and over all, 4,000 or so of the 112,000 U.A.W. members are
second-tier hires. Those numbers are expected to grow - and in fact can
increase significantly even under the current contract. The jobs are central
to the contract talks because they are viewed as critical to the industry's
continued recovery. 

Some benefits for the lower-tier workers are scaled back as well. They get
the union's traditional medical benefits, but a maximum of four weeks paid
time off a year, versus five for the longtime workers. And instead of the
guaranteed $3,100-a-month pension a full-paid worker receives after age 60,
the new hires have to build their own "personal retirement plan" based on
contributions from the company of less than $2,000 a year. 

The gap in wages between regular and entry-level workers has created dissent
in U.A.W. ranks. Some long-term employees have demonstrated against the
two-tier system and called for it to be abolished. Mr. King, however, has
focused on getting meaningful pay raises for the lower tier rather than
eliminating it. 

At the big Labor Day parade in Detroit, union activists chanted "equal pay
for equal work," and some full-paid workers said they were willing to forgo
a wage increase in the new contract to help the lower-tier employees. 

  _____  


Working for Less


(Page 2 of 2)

"In order to get those guys up, we'll take a signing bonus or profit-sharing
instead," said Gary Wurtz, a line worker at G.M.'s plant in Orion Township,
Mich., where 40 percent of the employees are lower tier. 

There were early problems with turnover among new hires who could not keep
up with the pace of assembly-line work, according to Pat Walsh, the manager
at Chrysler's plant here. But the workers who stayed have performed well.
"Our quality numbers have been very good," Mr. Walsh said. "And our data
doesn't show any differences per shift or per workstation." 

Workers at Jefferson North said that the pay gap had not created visible
tension. Rather, they say the older workers have encouraged the new hires to
hang tough in hopes of achieving full-wage status down the road. 

"They're just telling us to hold out and that everything is going to get
better," Mr. Chatman said. 

Mr. Chatman, who is 44 and single, said the security of the job is paramount
to him. But he does not hide the fact that he expects one day to make as
much money as his top-wage counterparts. 

"I think they should get rid of the two tiers," he said. "I hope it's not
here to stay. I hope it was just a steppingstone to get things back going
again at Chrysler." 

There is no hard timetable for the lower-paid workers to move to full-wage
status, but it could take years. As part of the government's bailout of G.M.
and Chrysler, the union agreed that no second-tier worker could move up
until 2015 at the earliest. At Ford, which did not receive federal aid, the
current contract lets the company fill 20 percent of its union jobs with
lower-paid workers before it moves any into the top tier. 

Experts on two-tier arrangements say that advancement opportunities are
critical to the system's success. "If you know you're going to get to the
top wage eventually, the system can work," said Peter Cappelli, a professor
at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. "The big problem is
when you think you'll never get there." 

For now, employees like Mr. Chatman are exhilarated by their steady
paychecks and the emotional reward of being part of Chrysler's turnaround.
Mr. Chatman was recently promoted to be a team leader in the plant,
facilitating the efforts of 10 other employees, including two full-wage
workers (no additional pay). 

He can't help smiling every time he sees each shiny new Grand Cherokee, one
of Chrysler's top-selling models, roll off the line. Still, it's tough to
accept that his entire annual salary of about $30,000 is not enough to
afford the least expensive Jeep made at Jefferson North. 

"It would be a shame to work at Chrysler," he said, "and not be able to
drive a Chrysler.

 

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