Word: pehr
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...exchange for cars, oil for the pumps of Sweden " We are leaving the defensive role Wand going on the offensive," declared Pehr Gyllenhammar, president of Volvo, Sweden's troubled giant (1977 sales: $3.6 billion). On that confident note, he announced last week a bold and imaginative reorganization that in one stroke will supply the automaker with urgently needed cash, give Sweden access to North Sea oilfields and bring in Norway as an energetic junior partner in a new binational corporation. The Norwegians, eager to use their oil riches to develop high-technology industries, called Gyllenhammar's proposal...
...larger company (1976 sales: $3.6 billion), Volvo will be the main partner, with 66% of the voting shares. Volvo's dynamic Pehr Gyllenhammar will be president, and Saab-Scania's Curt Mileikowsky will be executive vice chairman. Saabs aircraft division, which makes the Viggen jetfighter, will be part of the new company...
...generous that it is widely abused. In addition to days when he himself is ill, a father of three children, for example, by law gets 18 paid sick days to allow him to be at home when one or more of his children is bedridden. Says Volvo President Pehr G. Gyllenhammar: "It is no longer a question of whether individual Swedes can afford to be sick and still receive pay, because this is an obvious right. It is a question of the country's ability to pay for the level of absenteeism we have reached...
...first glance, a review of Pehr Gyllenhammar's meteoric career suggests that he rose to the top because he has the right relatives. In 1969, at the age of 34, the trim, handsome lawyer replaced his father as head of Skandia, Sweden's largest insurance company. Two years later he succeeded his father-in-law as managing director of Volvo, the country's biggest industrial concern. Nepotism or not, the selection has certainly paid off. Under Gyllenhammar's leadership, Volvo has not only increased its sales by 70% (to more than $2 billion...
...Kalmar system was worked out by Pehr Gyllenhammar, Volvo's managing director (see box). Three years ago, when he stepped in as chief executive, he had to cope with an incredibly high labor turnover rate. At Volvo's main assembly plant near Goteborg, turnover reached an annual rate of 41% in 1971, even though the company pays some of the highest wages in Swedish industry...