Nestlè confirms to cut 400 jobs in France

Swiss food group Nestle said on Friday it planned to cut as many as 400 jobs in France in support services and HQ functions, as it sees to cut cost and boost efficiency, confirming a media report.

The Swiss food company announced the plan in a meeting with labour leaders, according to Daniel Loget, secretary of the worker’s consultation committee at Nestle Purina in Paris, and Patrick Fernand, a representative from the CGT union.

The company has 13 000 employees in France. Nestlé will offer the employees retraining to switch to other positions and accept voluntary departures, a spokeswoman for the company said.

The announcement adds to the trickle of job cuts coming during President Emmanuel Macron’s administration. Earlier this week, retailer Carrefour SA said it plans to eliminate 2 400 positions.

Nestle, the world’s largest packaged food firm, already announced in September plans to cut 450 out of 550 jobs at its Galderma skincare research center near Nice on the French Riviera.

In November, the maker of Cailler chocolate and Gerber baby food announced plans to consolidate seven sites around Paris under one roof by 2020, uniting businesses ranging from Nespresso to Purina.

Nestlé France CEO Richard Girardot has promised that every Paris employee would be offered continued employment at the new office in Porte de Versailles on the west side of the city.

The new multiyear efficiency program would create centres for support services such as purchasing and logistics throughout Europe and the world, in locations including Lisbon; Wroclaw, Poland; and Lviv, Ukraine, according to union representatives.

About 2 000 people work in such services at Nestlé’s French businesses, Loget said. The country is Nestlé’s largest market in Europe by sales.