Firestone Plantation in Liberia Signs Wage Accord With Workers

Bloomberg
08/07/2008

By Ansu Konneh

Firestone Tire & Rubber Co.'s Liberian rubber plantation, one of the world's largest, will increase workers' pay by 19.5 percent, backdated to January last year, a union official said.

The accord, the first to be signed by Firestone with its workers in Liberia in the 80 years it has operated in the west African country, comes after several strikes over pay and conditions, Edwin Cisco, the secretary-general of the company's workers union, said in an interview in the capital, Monrovia, yesterday. Wages of the lowest-paid workers will increase 24 percent over three years, while the company has undertaken to improve working and living conditions and upgrade its primary school to secondary-school level, he said.

Firestone welcomes the agreement and will implement all its provisions to ensure industrial harmony and boost productivity, Charles Stuart, the company's general manager in Liberia, said yesterday.

Liberia is Africa's second-biggest producer of rubber, after Ivory Coast, generating about a quarter of the continent's annual output of 421,300 metric tons, according to the International Rubber Study Group.