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Word: laborative (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...save his company, Wagoner will haveto persuade the U.A.W. that what's good for GM is good for labor, even if it means shutting down plants and laying off workers. The company can't slim down easily, a legacy of earlier battles with the U.A.W. and labor deals that make it prohibitively expensive to shutter factories. What happens to a GM worker when his or her plant shuts down? Not much. Under GM's contract with the U.A.W., laid-off workers are entitled to 95% of their salary plus benefits for nearly two years. So while closing factories saves...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How GM Can Fix Itself | 11/27/2005 | See Source »

...only a major overhaul could do the job--and then only if a smooth road lies ahead. Wagoner is getting plenty of advice about how to fix things, from cutting GM's $1.1 billion stock dividend to demanding deeper wage-and-benefit cuts from hourly workers. A confrontation over labor issues is looming, in fact, since GM's contract with the United Auto Workers (U.A.W.) expires in September 2007. Until then, Wagoner seems to be gambling that the company can stay afloat via a series of tune-ups, ranging from having workers bear more health-care costs (annual savings...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How GM Can Fix Itself | 11/27/2005 | See Source »

Thanks to newer technology, the foreign manufacturers are more efficient too. The Big Three are closing the productivity gap; GM takes 23 hours of labor to produce one vehicle, down from 32 hours in 1998. But that's still longer than Toyota's 19.4 hours per vehicle and Nissan's 18.3. The real question, of course, is what kind of cars Americans want. Honda's timing at East Liberty was near perfect: its fuel-efficient Civic rolled off the line just as consumers were looking for ways to save on gas costs. "We're in a battle for survival right...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Jobs in Automaking: How Foreign Plants Are Booming | 11/27/2005 | See Source »

...which is quite possible, since House Republicans lean more conservative on this issue and Senate Republicans, more liberal--Bush would yet again look weak. So far, he has not been able to bridge his party's business leaders, who need a steady supply of workers willing to do hard labor, and its cultural conservatives, who fear that something essential about the American character is vanishing under the crosscurrents of multilingualism and demographic change and ethnic pluralism...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Playing Both Sides of the Fence | 11/27/2005 | See Source »

...Muslim problem.” But to do so would fail to appreciate the economic and social problems that all Western, developed countries face today. The African and Arab immigrants in France are its largest immigrant community, on which France today crucially depends to supply low-skilled labor at the time when its population growth continues to dwindle and its population continues...

Author: By Marcus Alexander | Title: The Children of the Republic | 11/23/2005 | See Source »

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