Boeing to cut at least 4,000 jobs

While the multinational aerospace firm has announced staff reductions for later this year, it says it will try and do so without the need for forced layoffs.

Following an announcement in February, Boeing Commercial Airplanes has made moves to cut around 4,000 jobs by June.
 
This decision was made by CEO, Ray Conner, at a senior leadership meeting and came in response to fierce competition from Airbus.
 
However, The Seattle Times alleges it has received an internal Boeing document saying that at least one internal department is due to experience a 10% reduction in headcount.
 
Sources told the paper that figure is almost what is expected to be cut overall, meaning that 8,000 out of the company’s 80,000-strong workforce will be affected.
 
When contacted by HC Online, Boeing countered these claims.
 
“There is no target for employment reductions,” a spokesperson said. “We continue to follow our plan announced last month to make fundamental changes for the long-term to win in the market, fund our growth and operate as a healthy business.”
 
This involves a combination of non-labour cost savings, supply chain savings and reduced staff levels, he added.
 
“The more we can control costs as a whole – the less impact there will be to employment.”
 
Total staff reductions through mid-year include hundreds of executives and managers, and are projected to total approximately 4,000 positions. None of these will involve involuntary layoffs, the spokesperson stressed.
 
“We’ve been able to reduce staffing levels through attrition, leaving open positions unfilled and voluntary layoffs,” he said. “We’ll only use involuntary layoffs as a last resort‎.”
 
Staff numbers have been on the decline since 2012 when Boeing employed 174,000 people around the world. At the start of 2016, just over 161,000 employees worked for the company globally.
 

Recent articles & video

When does 'consented resignation' become termination?

Be recognised as one of Australia's Innovative HR Teams

Bonza administrators urged to prioritise employees

Truck driver to repay over $70,000 for lying to get compensation payments

Most Read Articles

'On-the-spot' termination: Worker cries unfair dismissal amid personal issues

Worker resigns before long service leave entitlement kicked in: Can he still recover?

Employee or contractor? How employers can prepare for workplace laws coming in August