France to hold Siemens to account on Alstom job pledges

Reuters  |  PARIS 

PARIS (Reuters) - France will make sure sticks to its commitment to preserve following its rail business with Alstom, the French minister said as the seeks to reassure worried workers.

The French ministry said it had secured commitment from to safeguard Alstom's French manufacturing plants and for four-year period after the deal struck this week by the two companies closes.

"I will put in place committee to monitor the commitments taken by towards the French state," minister Bruno Le Maire told BFM TV on Thursday ahead of visit to Alstom's Valenciennes site in northern France on Friday.

With the unemployment rate still stuck above nine percent, recent string of cross-border corporate deals giving foreign companies control over French firms have led to criticism from opposition politicians of the centrist of new French President Emmanuel Macron.

On Wednesday, Italian shipbuilder Fincantieri won deal to take effective control of French shipyard STX France, ending months of resistance by the French

In order to lessen concerns about foreign ownership, Le Maire said France will have independent board members in the new Siemens-company, who will have the right to veto all strategic decisions for four years.

He also said that the French state, as major customer, will have major influence on the new Siemens-due to it having 5 to 15 percent capital stake in the combination.

Le Maire reiterated that fierce competition from Chinese players who are twice as big as and combined, meant they had no choice but to merge their rail activities.

"Otherwise we would be eaten raw," he said.

Asked about job promises made in previous takeovers of French companies, Le Maire said the would make sure that General Electric respects commitments it made after its acquisition of Alstom's energy division two years ago.

He also said he had spoken with the president of Nokia to remind him of promise to create in France.

When buying Alcatel-Lucent in 2016, Nokia pledged to hire 500 people in research and development in France, but the firm said earlier this month it would cut nearly 600 in France by end-2019 as part of cost-cutting plan.

"I told him he needs to accelerate creation, because the target has not been met and we have the means to exert all necessary pressure," Le Maire said.

(Reporting by Geert De Clercq; Editing by Sudip Kar-Gupta and Alexander Smith)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, September 28 2017. 15:11 IST