2006年VOA标准英语-Foreign Competition Forces US Autoworker Conces(在线收听) |
By Peter Fedynsky One of America's major labor organizations, the United Auto Workers, or UAW, held a convention this week amid signs that foreign competition will force the organization to accept benefit concessions. ----------------------------------------------- Millions of Americans are fans of stock car races, which feature powerful vehicles that resemble the family sedan. Since the largest U.S. racing organization, NASCAR, was founded in the late 1940s, those stock cars have always been American. Next year, for the first time, NASCAR races will include the Toyota Camry, a Japanese car built in America. Several Toyota models also have more American parts than vehicles built by the “Big-Three” American automakers -- Ford, General Motors and Chrysler -- or more precisely, Daimler-Chrysler, which is owned by American, European and other international investors. Some Fords, incidentally, are assembled in Mexico for distribution in the United States and the company has factories in China for sales in that country.
Foreign manufacturers in the United States employ tens of thousand of Americans in supply companies and newly built plants, particularly in the southeastern states. As foreign vehicles roll off assembly lines with non-union labor, domestic manufacturers close plants and lay off workers--most of them union members. At the same time, the total number of U.S. autoworkers has remained at 1.1 million over the last 10 years.
The UAW is prepared to make concessions to help compete against foreign manufacturers, who do not carry such high labor costs. Booher says concessions are necessary. "That's a model I think you're going to be seeing in the future in the auto industry and other industries,” he said. “Maybe in the 20th century we were a cradle-to-grave society, but I think we're going to be asking all of our citizens in the future to take some responsibility for their own long-term financial and other benefits viability." Others, including UAW president Ron Gettelfinger, are calling for a universal health care system. That, however, has been a controversial political issue for more than half a century and Congress does not appear likely to enact such a system in the near future. Meanwhile, foreign competition has increased the efficiency of the American autoworker, who is producing more cars with better quality. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/6/32980.html |