http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,2144,3079085,00.html
 
Deutsche Welle
20.01.2008 

EU Official Urges Scrapping of Firm Subsidies After Nokia Closure


Finnish cell phone-maker Nokia's decision to close a plant in Germany shows
that state subsidies should no longer be paid to attract companies,
according to EU Industry Commissioner Verheugen. 



In an interview with German newspaper Welt am Sonntag, European Union
Industry Commissioner Günter Verheugen raised questions over the use of
public money to subsidize industry.

 

"Nokia gives us cause to reconsider state policy on subsidies altogether,"
Verheugen told the paper. "I think there's no sense in the state paying
subsidies in order to attract companies."

 

Nokia, the world's biggest cell phone maker, said this week it would close a
plant in the city of Bochum in Germany's western industrial Ruhr region
because it was not competitive and move production to Romania instead. It
plans to relocate to the towns of Cluj and Jucu in Romania on grounds of
lower wage costs.

 

The company said the move will cost up to 2,300 layoffs at the Bochum plant.
A number of part-time workers at the site have already been dismissed,
according to a German newspaper report over the weekend.

 

"A subsidy locust"

 

Nokia's decision has provoked outrage in Germany, with state politicians
threatening to seek the repayment of some the more than 80 million euros
($120 million) in state and federal subsidies the company had received over
the 20 years of the plant's existence.

 

North Rhine-Westphalia Economics Minister Christa Thoben asked whether the
company was receiving a subsidy from the European Union to set up in
Romania. Germany is the largest contributor to EU funds.

 

And state premier Jürgen Rüttgers suggested the company was behaving like a
"subsidy locust."

 

The head of the IG Metall trade union, Berthold Huber, on Friday said steps
needed to be taken to keep companies from abandoning Germany.

 

"In Germany it is much too easy for companies to close factories and leave
people unemployed," he said. "These companies do enormous damage to society,
and they need to be held responsible for it."

 

Politicians call for Nokia boycott

 

A few German politicians have said they would trade in their Nokia cell
phones for another brand.

 

Kurt Beck, head of Germany's Social Democratic Party (SPD) called for an
indirect boycott of Nokia cell phones.

 

"It's not my style to call for a goods boycott," Beck told German newspaper
Bild am Sonntag. "But for me as I'm sure for many Germans, the name Nokia
doesn't have a good ring to it anymore," he said, adding that we would not
use the company's cell phone any more.

 

"We can all together make it clear that we're not going to led ourselves be
misled. Germany has 82 million consumers."

 

European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso hinted the European Union
might be prepared to help those affected.

 

"I understand the dismay of the people in Bochum," he told German magazine
WirtschaftsWoche. "For the very reason we know how hard the process of
change can be, we have social and globalization funds in cases where member
states can't shoulder the burden of such changes."

 

Nokia on "wrong path"

 

Verheugen, a German who also serves as commission vice president under Jose
Manuel Barroso, said Nokia's surprise announcement of the closure of the
German plant pointed to "serious management failures."

 

"Nokia's behavior is the product of a new religion which idolizes
shareholder value," he said. "That's the wrong path."

 

Nokia, which makes almost 40 per cent of the world's mobile phones, has
insisted its decision was soundly based and that it was final. 

 

Industry insiders in Germany said the factory-gate price of a no-frills
phone had fallen to less than 10 euros, although others noted that wages
made up just five per cent of the cost of a mobile phone made at the Bochum
plant.

 

Nokia is to hold talks with German politicians and worker representatives on
a social package to ease the closure.

DW staff (sp)

© 2008 Deutsche Welle
 
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