The Carpocalypse is here — automakers are set to cull 80,000 jobs in the next few years

Car assembly line worker fordAP

  • Autowork­ers have been hit hard in 2019.
  • Around the world, rough­ly 80,000 jobs are set to be lost over the next few , accord­ing to data com­piled by Bloomberg. 
  • Last week, near­ly 20,000 jobs were shed Ger­man auto titans Daim­ler and Audi, due to falling sales and the increas­ing cost of car pro­duc­tion. 
  • Elec­tri­fi­ca­tion, trade dis­putes, and Brex­it have hurt sales and caused costs to rise.
  • View Insid­er’s home­page for more sto­ries. 

Autowork­ers have been hit hard in 2019.

Glob­al­ly, rough­ly 80,000 lay­offs are set to place in the next few years, accord­ing to data com­piled by Bloomberg, which ana­lyzed automak­ers announc­ing large scale job cuts this year. 

In the last week, near­ly 20,000 jobs were shed from Ger­man auto titans Daim­ler and Audi, which both sep­a­rate­ly major cuts due to falling sales and the increas­ing cost of elec­tric car pro­duc­tion. 

This comes after thou­sands of job cuts were announced at Nis­san, as well as fur­ther cuts at Ford and GM ear­li­er this year in the US. Bloomberg added that fur­ther cuts were announced in Chi­na, a big auto pro­duc­er. NIO, a Chi­nese elec­tric car start­up, cut 2,000 in Sep­tem­ber, after its stock tanked 61% this year. 

A of issues has hurt the indus­try. 

Brex­it and the tar­iff spat between the US and Chi­na are upping the price of car parts, while also hit­ting demand. Increas­ing elec­tri­fi­ca­tion and teh rise of ride-shar­ing apps is also hurt­ing sales. 

Bloomberg, cit­ing research from IHS Mark­it, said that car and truck pro­duc­tion slipped 6% com­pared to last year.

Pro­duc­tion in the Ger­man auto indus­try (a good barom­e­ter of pro­duc­tion) from its peak in mid-2018 slipped 18% — a drop that Gold­man Sachs in Novem­ber said helped con­tributed to a third of ’s GDP decline since 2017. The bank said much of this has been due to Brex­it, weak demand, and tar­iffs hurt­ing sales. 

Man­u­fac­tur­ers are also push­ing to increase elec­tric car pro­duc­tion. In late Novem­ber, the Guardian report­ed that Audi want­ed to save rough­ly €6 bil­lion ($6.64 bil­lion) through its 9,500 job cuts to in elec­tric cars, as part of its aim to “become lean and fit for the future.”

Ear­li­er this year, one ana­lyst at Nomu­ra said that “the pain is just begin­ning,” and that glob­al car demand will con­tin­ue to fall. Anoth­er ana­lyst at Bank of Amer­i­ca said that the auto cycle had peaked and now we’re expect­ing pro­duc­tion to con­tin­ue to fall. 

Fitch Rat­ings in May said that the weak­ness in autos has hurt eco­nom­ic growth — the decline in auto sales in 2018 like­ly shaved off 0.2% of glob­al growth that year.

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