WORLD> Asia-Pacific
Toyota mulls cutting 1,000 full-time jobs
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-01-23 11:05

TOKYO – Toyota Motor Corp. is considering cutting more than 1,000 full-time jobs in North America and the United Kingdom to cope with faltering global demand, a news report said Friday.

 The Toyota Motor logo. Japanese carmaker Toyota Motor Corp. is considering shedding more than 1,000 regular workers in North America and in Britain, a report said Friday. [Agencies]

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The details of the job cuts will likely be finalized by the end of the month, said the Nikkei, Japan's top business daily, citing an unnamed senior company official. Japan's top automaker could slash more jobs in other regions if global auto sales continue to slump, the daily said.

Toyota spokesman Yuta Kaga declined to confirm the report, saying nothing had been decided.

Hit by the collapse in demand for cars, Toyota is expecting to incur its first operating loss in 70 years. The company on Tuesday tapped Akio Toyoda, grandson of the Japanese automaker's founder, as president, paying homage to its roots amid a deepening global downturn.

The US-educated Toyoda, 52, is the first founding family member to take the helm at the Japanese auto giant in 14 years.

Like other Japanese automakers, Toyota has been reducing temporary workers at its auto plants in Japan to curb production amid the global recession.

But the job cuts have so far not affected its full-time workers. If Toyota resorts to cutting full-time staff, it will be the first time since 1950, when the automaker reduced 1,600 full-time jobs in Japan, the Nikkei said.

Toyota, which runs seven auto plants in North America, employs 36,000 full-time workers in the region. The company has about 5,000 full-time staff in the United Kingdom, Kaga said.

Toyota employs 316,000 full-time workers globally, including nearly 70,000 in Japan.

Toyota has been booming in recent years, but it has been hammered by the global downturn. The US financial crisis sent auto demand plunging last year in the key North American market.