Volkswagen may need to eliminate about 50,000 additional jobs to match the competitiveness of its rivals, its CEO told employees in an internal memo, effectively confirming for the first time that the carmaker is considering cuts of up to 100,000 positions.
Oliver Blume is battling to streamline Europe's biggest carmaker, whose profits have slumped as its faces billions of euros in tariff costs, stiff competition in China and pressure on its German manufacturing network to become more efficient.
After already agreeing 50,000 job cuts across the group, including its Porsche and Audi subsidiaries, the company must work on reducing costs further, having calculated a cost disadvantage versus comparable companies of 20%, Blume said in the memo seen by Reuters.
This means a "theoretical deduction" of another 50,000 jobs worldwide, the memo said.
"We are currently assessing across all brands, companies and regions how many adjustments are actually necessary and feasible," Blume said in the document.












