General Motors Co wants to put nearly a fifth of its workers at a factory in Brazil on paid leave, an auto workers union said on Thursday, amid falling output in Latin America's largest economy.
Calling the move "unnecessary," the union said 1,000 of 5,200 workers in São José dos Campos, Sao Paulo state, could be laid off. Workers and the Detroit-based auto maker will likely discuss the proposal on Aug. 1, a union leader said.
Brazil's production of cars, trucks and buses is expected to have its steepest decline in 16 years at 10.0 percent in 2014 as sales retreat 5.4 percent, according to national automakers' association Anfavea.
Reducing the workforce is one of automakers' few ways of protecting profits as new factories, weak demand and evaporating exports to Argentina batter profit margins in a market that for years had stood out amid meager global growth.
General Motors put 940 workers at the same factory on paid leave in 2012, and the union said 598 of them were later fired. The factory produced models that have been discontinued, like Meriva and Zarifa, and now makes S-10 trucks and motors.
Germany's Volkswagen put 900 workers in Brazil on paid leave in May and France's PSA Peugeot Citroen started a voluntary leave program for workers in Rio de Janeiro state that same month.
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