As part of an 800-million-euro cost-cutting plan amid a stagnating European car market, PSA Peugeot Citroen on Oct. 26 said it planned to slash thousands of jobs in Europe.
Nearly 6,800 jobs among group employees and subcontractors are at risk.
The group announced to unions that 800 temporary positions would be cut in France by the end of the year, a union source said.
For 2012, the company said, another 1,000 manufacturing jobs would be cut through voluntary departures, up to 2,500 non-production positions would be eliminated and another 2,500 jobs were expected to be lost by ending outsourcing contracts.
The company, Europe's second-largest after Germany's Volkswagen, employs more than 205,000 people around the world, including 100,000 in France. It employs 167,000 people in total in Europe. The new plan comes on top of a program announced in 2009 that aims to save a total of 3.7 billion euros.
CGT union representative Bruno Lemerle slammed the plan as "scandalous."
"Logically when the results are good, the company should employ people, try to develop," Lemerle said, pointing to the increased overall turnover figure.
"Our workload is excessive as it is, we don't need a reduction in the workforce," he said.
The cost-cutting program comes after the company announced that sales in its cars division fell 1.6% to 9.3 billion euros (US$12.94 billion) in the third quarter.
However, overall sales rose 3.5% to 13.45 billion euros.
"The competitive environment has become more challenging due to pricing pressure, which has intensified in Europe since September," the company said."In this tougher environment, recurrent operating income for the automotive division is now expected to be close to break-even for the full year," it said.
It also noted "negative impacts over the full year of 250 million euros from the aftermath of the (March earthquake) disaster in Japan and 700 million euros from higher raw materials prices."
In a separate statement after the union meeting, PSA said the job cuts "are designed to streamline the group's organizational structures or to adjust project budgets, particularly in sales, marketing, information technology and research and development."
With two huge manufacturers, PSA and Renault, France's auto industry is key to the country's economy and accounts for around 10 percent of the national workforce. PSA chief Philippe Varin met French Industry Minister Eric Besson after the announcement and insisted that the group's manufacturing presence in France was not in question, the ministry said.
PSA "specified that the decisions announced today do not call into question the PSA group's industrial presence in France," the ministry said.
The company said it expected growth in the European market to stabilize this year, but for sales to grow 7% in China, 6% in Latin America and 30% in Russia.
The company also said it plans to make new investments to double its production capacity in Brazil.
Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2011