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  5. A lose-lose game? The twin transition and the division of labor in the European automotive supplier industry

A lose-lose game? The twin transition and the division of labor in the European automotive supplier industry

Publication date
2026-05-27
Document type
Forschungsartikel
Author
Krzywdzinski, Martin  
Martišková, Monika
Gažo, Patrik
Guga, Ştefan
Meszmann, Tibor
Rakowska, Katarzyna
Organisational unit
Internationale Arbeitsbeziehungen  
DOI
10.1177/09596801261454480
URI
https://openhsu.ub.hsu-hh.de/handle/10.24405/23762
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Series or journal
European Journal of Industrial Relations
ISSN
0959-6801
Peer-reviewed
✅
Part of the university bibliography
✅
Additional Information
Language
English
Abstract
The twin transition—automation/digitalization and the shift to electromobility—poses major challenges for the European automotive supplier industry. This article examines how these transformations reshape plant roles and labor-use strategies in Germany and Central and Eastern/South Eastern Europe (CEE/SEE), regions historically linked through an integrated division of labor. The paper addresses three questions: (1) How have lead plant functions evolved between 2016 and 2024? (2) What differences do we observe between German and CEE/SEE automotive supplier plants with regard to the twin transition? (3) What differences do we observe between Germany and CEE/SEE with regard to labor-use strategies? The analysis draws on two surveys of employee representatives in supplier plants (Germany and five CEE/SEE countries) conducted in 2016 and 2024. Findings indicate slight erosion of German lead plant roles without corresponding upgrade in CEE/SEE; limited but stronger efforts in Germany toward electromobility; and persistent national differences in automation and labor-use strategies, with Germany maintaining high-skill approaches and CEE/SEE relying primarily on semi- and low-skilled labor.
Description
This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Online first
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