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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Enter the robots: Automation fills gaps in east Europe’s factories

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Plant manager Gabor Kiraly remembers the meeting a couple of years ago when he and his Austrian bosses learnt how severe the worker shortage in Hungary was about to become — it was, he said, a “shocking realisation”. The unemployment rate in the western Hungarian town of Papa, where Hirtenberger Automotive Safety employs 725 people making products such as seat belt pre-tensioners, was approaching virtually zero.


High turnover was already a big problem. Enter the robots. Hirtenberger has since spent 2.5 million euros automating two production units at the factory to meet surging demand from the likes of BMW, Mercedes, Volkswagen and Audi. And it’s not alone.


Companies across eastern Europe are ramping up investment in automation to cope with a labour shortage that started after the 2008 financial crisis and after final curbs were lifted in 2011 on worker flows to richer countries in the European Union.


While policymakers and economists in many parts of the world worry about the potential social negatives of robots displacing humans, here automation is a godsend for companies that want to avoid losing market share.


The changes indicate a shift in the labour-intensive model of the former Communist satellite states, which have attracted foreign investment with tax incentives and labour costs that pale in comparison to those in the West.


While companies have jacked up wages significantly, it hasn’t been enough to persuade young people to stay, or to make up for demographic trends that indicate a shrinking, ageing population.


If low fertility rates persist, the combined population of Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Hungary will fall by more than 8 million to 56 million by 2050, according to a 2017 UN report.


“Before the crisis, there was not enough capital available, while labour was very cheap and abundant,” said Attila Godi, chief executive at Hungarian roof tile maker Terran Tetocserep, which spent 900,000 euros last year to install robots and ancillary equipment at its southern unit.


“This trend has now reversed. Capital is available and this should be invested into modern, functioning technology, while the cost of labour has increased,” Godi said.


Economists warn the labour shortage could have a crippling effect on some of eastern Europe’s economies before the end of this decade, at a time when companies in the west are also complaining about the scarcity of workers, including in Germany, the Netherlands, France and Britain.


“While the gradual tightening of labour markets has been evident for at least three years, 2018 may be a tipping point, with labour shortages starting to weigh on economic growth,” analysts at UniCredit said.


Companies may also start to think about relocating.


Kiraly said that was not one of the options discussed at the meeting at Hirtenberger’s headquarters because of the investments made in Papa, a “strategic base” for the firm.


“That is why we have opted for automation as our strategy.


Because if we automate, the labour market effect will be less significant,” he said.


But he added Hirtenberger was also considering a new plant closer to the source of demand, without giving details.


Hungary faces the biggest shortages but Czech, Slovak and Polish companies have also been affected, a survey by Austrian Erste Group Bank showed last month.


ORDERS TURNED DOWN


An Ipsos survey of 100 Czech companies found that nearly a third had to turn down orders last year because of the labour shortage, and one in four Czech businesses were planning to accelerate their automation plans.


Vesz-Mont 2000 builds robotised production units but has struggled to keep up with demand because it also is affected by the labour shortage.


Launched in a barn 19 years ago, the company went from building gym equipment to units for automotive suppliers and other firms and now employs 170 people.


“The array of tasks we have robotised (for our clients) more than tripled over the past year,” Chief Executive Tibor Zentai said.


Revenues rose by about 10 per cent last year and the company aims to double robot sales this year, he said.


“It could have been a lot higher based on the demand, but we could barely keep up with the market,” Zentai said.


The Frankfurt-based International Federation of Robotics (IFR) estimates that 9,900 robots were installed in central and eastern Europe last year, up 28 per cent from the year before.


The IFR projects a 21 per cent compound annual growth rate in robot shipments to the region by the end of this decade, nearly double the European average.


Robot density, a measure of multipurpose industrial robots per 10,000 workers in the manufacturing sector, was the highest in Slovakia at 135, followed by 101 in the Czech Republic, 57 in Hungary and 32 in Poland, according to IFR figures in 2016.


Poland’s number is low thanks to the more than a million workers from neighbouring Ukraine, which has a similar culture and language, on work permits that are relatively easy to obtain.


Jakub Gontarek, an expert at a Polish employers’ union, said it was still cheaper for Polish companies to hire them or to pay more than to automate.


Austria-based Engel, which supplied plastic overmoulding machines to Hirtenberger, said while two-thirds of the machines it sold in Hungary were automated in 2017, that proportion has risen to more than 75 per cent for new orders.


Engel also automates existing machines, the chief executive of its Hungarian unit, Albert Vincze, said.


“Right now we are installing and launching four such robots at our clients and we are in talks with another client about the after-sales installation of three robots where the purchase is clearly driven by the need to replace human labour,” he said. — Reuters


Gergely Szakacs


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