Deutsche's Postbank faces strike as wage talks deadlock
BERLIN - Some employees of Deutsche Bank's DBKGn.DE Postbank
will stage a strike on Monday to raise pressure on management to meet their
demands for higher wages in the face of rising inflation, a union official said
on Sunday.
The strikes at branches in Berlin, Dortmund and Cologne as
well as at the bank's call centre follow days of separate wage negotiations for
the broader banking industry in Germany.
For months, unions and management at Germany's private and
public sector banks have held multiple rounds of wage talks Link that would
affect 200,000 workers. The outcome so far has been deadlock, punctuated by
brief labour stoppages.
In Germany's private sector bank wage negotiations,
including for Postbank employees, unions have wanted a 4.5% increase for the
140,000 staff represented in the talks.
Management rejected those demands and offered a one-off
500-euro payment.
Inflation in Europe's largest economy has gathered pace. In
December, the national consumer price index (CPI) rose 5.3% year-on-year Link
the highest since June 1992 and an acceleration in price pressures after 5.2%
in November.
Unions are using inflation as an argument for higher wages
when German banks, faced with stiff competition, are trying to cut costs and
reduce headcount. Central banks worry that higher wages could further entrench
inflation.
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