Illustration of Volkswagen executives approving CEO Blume's savings plan in a boardroom meeting.
Illustration of Volkswagen executives approving CEO Blume's savings plan in a boardroom meeting.
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Volkswagen supervisory board approves Blume savings plan

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The carmaker's supervisory board approved CEO Oliver Blume's restructuring plan on Thursday. A decision on possible plant closures was postponed.

On Thursday Oliver Blume presented the supervisory board with the most far-reaching corporate restructuring since the 2024 tariff compromise. The plans include sharper cost targets, leaner structures and further job cuts to maintain margins despite weak vehicle sales.

Hundreds of employees protested outside the brand headquarters in Wolfsburg with whistles and sirens. Works council chair Daniela Cavallo and IG Metall chair Christiane Benner warned of a "damn tough time" and prepared staff for conflict.

The most controversial questions on plant closures were initially postponed. Morale among the workforce is described as extremely poor as management cuts jobs to meet cost targets.

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Initial reactions on X focus on the July 9 supervisory board meeting discussing Oliver Blume's restructuring plan, including potential cuts of up to 100,000 jobs and closures of four German plants (Hanover, Emden, Zwickau, Neckarsulm). Users highlight strong union and worker resistance, a board deadlock, and skepticism about VW's long-term viability amid Chinese competition and tariffs. Some posts detail postponed decisions and planned follow-up meetings in September/November, while others criticize the scale of cuts as doubling prior agreements.

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Chancellor Friedrich Merz presenting a reform package for growth to coalition members in a government setting.
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Coalition agrees on reform package for growth

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The federal government agreed on a package of more than 30 reform measures on Wednesday evening. Chancellor Friedrich Merz presented it on Thursday.

Oliver Blume will present his restructuring plan titled „Group Target Picture 2030“ to the Volkswagen supervisory board on July 9.

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CEO Oliver Blume announces further cost-cutting measures at the shareholders' meeting. By the end of the year 19,000 jobs are to be cut in a socially acceptable manner in the German AG. Despite the cuts, profits are falling and key cost blocks are rising.

Germany's black-red federal government aims to pass a package of reforms covering taxes, the labor market, pensions and bureaucracy reduction before the summer break. A further coalition committee meeting shortly before the parliamentary summer recess in early July is set to make the decisions. Chancellor Friedrich Merz will invite social partners to the chancellery in early June.

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Chancellor Friedrich Merz faced interruptions and skepticism from union delegates at the DGB congress in Berlin. Speaking before about 400 attendees, he defended his reform agenda while DGB chair Yasmin Fahimi warned against rolling back labor rights.

Automotive supplier Bosch posted its first loss since 2009 last fiscal year, with a net deficit of 400 million euros. Despite domestic losses, CEO Stefan Hartung looks ahead optimistically. For 2026, the company forecasts sales growth and a solid operating margin.

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Brauerei Wolters in Braunschweig has filed for self-administered insolvency. Persistent sales weakness and rising costs are the reasons. The operation is to be restructured.

 

 

 

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