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  • Writer's pictureBy The Financial District

German Builders To Strike As Employers Reject Wage Hike

The German construction sector faces its first nationwide strike since 2002 after employers rejected a deal that independent negotiators had hoped would solve their dispute over the wages of some 930,000 workers, as reported by Klaus Lauer and Rachel More for Reuters.


The deal proposed a raise of 250 euros per month from May 1, 2024, with a further increase on April 1, 2025, of 4.15% in western Germany and 4.95% in eastern Germany. I Photo: IG BAU Facebook



"Now we strike, massively," said Robert Feiger, head of the IG BAU union. Shortly before, employers had said they could not accept the arbitrated deal, which had been accepted by the union in late April.


Among other things, the deal proposed a raise of 250 euros per month from May 1, 2024, with a further increase on April 1, 2025, of 4.15% in western Germany and 4.95% in eastern Germany.



"Now it's not us, IG BAU, who are responsible for the strike, but the construction companies themselves," Feiger said, calling on them to explain to developers why housing, motorway, and industrial construction projects would be delayed.


The employers' chief negotiator, Uwe Nostitz, spoke of "serious shortcomings" in the arbitrated proposal, such as inconsistencies in the remuneration of trainees who would have received less money in their second year than their first.




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