Espoo: Telecom network equipment
maker Nokia is likely to cut 10,000 to 15,000 jobs globally - far more than it
has announced so far - after its acquisition of Franco-American rival
Alcatel-Lucent, a Finnish union representative said.
The company has announced plans for
around 2,400 job cuts in Finland and Germany as part of a cost-cutting program
but has not so far given a global figure. Cuts on the scale estimated by the
union would represent as much as 14 percent of Nokia’s worldwide work force of
104,000.
Nokia kicked off the rationalization
program in April with a target to slash 900 million Euros ($1 billion) of
operating costs by 2018.
“We
haven’t heard any official numbers, but based on the information from our union
contacts, I would estimate the global impact of this round would likely be
around 10,000 to 15,000 jobs,” said Risto Lehtilahti, a trade union shop
steward at Nokia’s Oulu site.
Analysts
and union representatives said that the company will likely follow up with a
new round of cuts once the current one is finished.
“Nokia and Alcatel have lots of
overlaps, so the numbers will go up and the range could be something like that
(10,000-15,000),” said Hannu Rauhala, analyst at OP Equities.
“The integration takes place at a
very hectic stage in the network industry. The market is falling, technology is
changing and the environment is turbulent, so it is difficult to see that they
would make it (the company) ready in one go,” he said.
Nokia set out plans for its home
country last week, saying it was cutting around 1,000 Finnish jobs, compared to
an initial target of 1,300 jobs.
Nokia has said it is looking to
reduce 1,400 positions in Germany. In France, it would cut around 400 jobs but
also create 500 research and development posts.
To win French government support for
the 15.6 billion euro deal, Nokia pledged during negotiations not to cut French
jobs for two years, beyond what Alcatel had already planned.
In
Finland, Nokia has slashed thousands of jobs over the past decade as its
once-dominant phone business was eclipsed by the rise of smartphone rivals. The
phone business was eventually sold to Microsoft, which has continued cutting
jobs in the country.
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