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Honda Motorcycles Gives Option Of Voluntary Retirement In India: Letter Shows

The company said the first 400 people to opt for retirement would get an additional amount of Rs 500,000.
The company said the first 400 people to opt for retirement would get an additional amount of Rs 500,000.

Honda Motor Co is offering voluntary retirement to a group of employees at its motorcycles and scooters unit in India amid slowing demand in the country following the Covid-19 pandemic, according to a company letter.

Honda Motorcycles and Scooters India (HMSI), the country's second-largest manufacturer of two-wheelers, made the offer to “maintain its existence” in a competitive market, it said in a letter to its employees' union dated January 5.

While automakers globally have been battered by the pandemic, companies in India have been hit by slowing demand since 2019.

“The Indian auto industry is going through an exceptionally challenging phase considering the prolonged demand slowdown and economic fallout from the coronavirus crisis,” HMSI said in the letter, which was reviewed by Reuters.

“In these uncertain times, we are aligning our production strategy for improved overall operational efficiency with the objective of long term business sustainability,” it said.

HMSI did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment.

The HMSI letter said the scheme can be availed by permanent employees who have completed 10 years of service or are over 40 as of January 31, 2021. Based on the number of years of service, a senior manager or vice president would be eligible for a payout of Rs 7.2 million ($98,488), the letter showed.

While it was not immediately clear how many employees this would apply to, the company said the first 400 people to opt for retirement would get an additional amount of Rs 500,000.

HMSI has over 7,000 employees across its four plants in India, according to a March 31, 2020, filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.

Between April and November, the first eight months of the current fiscal year, HMSI's sales plummeted 32 per cent to 2.4 million units with overall sales of motorcycles and scooters falling 25 per cent, industry data showed. The automaker has capacity to manufacture 6.4 million motorcycles and scooters a year in India, according to its website.

The move comes weeks after the Japanese automaker was also forced to shutter one of two car plants in India, with sales coming under pressure from competitors.