Thursday, 18 June 2026

Thursday, 18 June, 2026

11:24 PM

, Kuching, Sarawak

Germany’s Volkswagen Group on track to cut 50,000 jobs by 2030

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In this file photo, CEO of Volkswagen AG, Oliver Blume, speaks at the Volkswagen Group's annual press conference in Autostadt. - Photo: Julian Stratenschulte/dpa

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WOLFSBURG, Germany: German car manufacturing giant, Volkswagen Group, is on track to cut 50,000 jobs by 2030, said Chief Executive Oliver Blume today, at the company’s annual general meeting. 

Blume told shareholders at the meeting held online that Volkswagen’s situation was “tense and demanding”, saying conditions in the automotive industry have worsened further in 2026. 

“Our business model, which was successful for decades, no longer works today. We have to develop it further,” he said, reported German news agency dpa.

The chief executive outlined key points for the carmaker’s new 2030 strategy, which was published in May. 

Volkswagen’s goal is to become “the world’s most attractive carmaker” by the end of this decade, he said, with a return on sales of between 8 per cent and 10 per cent.

New models such as the recently unveiled electric ID. Polo show the brand is on the right track and “at the front of the competition again,” Blume argued.

“However, we are not earning enough money from them,” he continued.

At the core VW brand alone, 35,000 jobs are to be cut by 2030. The workforce will already have shrunk by 19,000 by the end of 2026, Blume said, explaining that around 28,000 voluntary departures have already been agreed.

Factory costs at German VW sites fell by more than 20 per cent in 2025, he added.

Blume also reaffirmed his plans to further reduce plant capacity. By 2030, he wants to reduce the capacity of his European plants by a further 500,000 vehicles – in addition to the already ongoing reduction of 1 million vehicles by 2028. 

An equal number is to be cut in China, bringing the total global reduction to 1 million cars by 2030. – BERNAMA-dpa

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