German airline Lufthansa has said it
will have to slash 22,000 full-time jobs as it predicts a muted recovery
in demand for
travel following the coronavirus pandemic.
“The recovery in demand in the air transport sector will be slow in the foreseeable future,” the airline said.
The group would operate about 100 less
aircraft after the crisis, leading to “a total of 22,000 fewer full-time
positions in the Lufthansa Group, half of them in Germany”. The posts
make up 16 percent of the Lufthansa Group’s total workforce of 135,000.
The airline said however that it would
look at how it could use schemes for shorter work hours and other crisis
arrangements to avoid outright redundancies.
Lufthansa, like its peers, has been brought to its knees by restrictions introduced to curb the spread of the coronavirus.
Around 700 of the group’s 763 aircraft
were grounded at the peak of the lockdowns and it was forced to place
87,000 workers on government-backed shorter hours schemes.
Lufthansa’s supervisory board last week
approved a nine-billion-euro bailout deal from the German government
after the company posted a first-quarter net loss of 2.1 billion euros
($2.3 billion).
The bailout would see the German government take a 20-percent stake
in the group, with an option on a further five percent plus one share to
block hostile takeovers. The airline has also lost its place on
Frankfurt’s Dax 30 index after its share price collapsed.
“Without a significant reduction in
personnel costs during the crisis, we will miss the opportunity of a
better restart from the crisis and risk the Lufthansa Group emerging
from the crisis significantly weakened,” said Michael Niggemann, who
heads the airline’s human resources and legal affairs departments.
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