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Increasing costs threaten wage disagreements in Germany, warns union chief

Rising rates are putting German workers under pressure, threatening to escalate wage disagreements, the head of among the nation's top trade unions has warned.

Germany has suffered a spate of strikes recently, putting trains, airplanes, creches and other services out of action, intensifying the nation's problems as its economy grinds to a virtual stop.

As the economy has stuttered, costs have continued to rise, albeit at a slowing speed, activating needs for higher wages.

Frank Werneke, chairman of the Verdi labour union, one of Germany's largest, stated that rates were pushing workers and that labour lacks, with numerous thousands of jobs still vacant, were providing the self-confidence to demand more.

He said salaries amongst bus motorists, security workers or others had often lagged rising rates, setting off a rise in disagreements.

Striking is part of democracy, he stated, warning politicians against any effort to water it down.

We remain in a phase where there are more industrial conflicts, he said. It is not the case that inflation pressure is gone. We need to ... protect a minimum of stable genuine salaries ... in the coming wage settlements.

Werneke's remarks underscore the continued hazard from inflation to Germany's cooperative service model that typically wed the interests of trade unions and business, keeping strikes to a minimum.

Lufthansa does not provide something voluntarily. The airport operators don't provide willingly, he stated. These are always difficult settlements. Without a minimum of the possibility of going on strike, wage negotiations would be jointly asking.

In the last few years, industrial action has actually ended up being more commonplace. This includes recent strikes by employees in the electrical engineering and metal markets, which utilize millions, that hit companies such as Porsche and BMW.

Werneke repeated his assistance for Commerzbank, one of Germany's leading banks, in warding off a possible takeover by an Italian competitor, warning that such a deal might lead to task losses.

(source: Reuters)