Ford revives century-old wage playbook to keep Gen Z auto workers

NEW YORK, UNITED STATES — Confronting a modern crisis of young employees working multiple jobs to survive, Ford Motor Company is explicitly channeling its founder’s 1914 wage strategy to transform its workforce.
Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Jim Farley revealed the impetus at the Aspen Ideas Festival, stating he was moved to act after veteran employees detailed during union talks how low entry-level pay was driving stress and secondary employment among younger staff.
Historical precedent informs modern wage strategy
In January 1914, Henry Ford more than doubled factory wages to $5 a day, a move economists credit with helping jump-start the American middle class.
Farley stated this was not an altruistic gesture but a calculated strategy to attract a stable workforce and ensure workers could afford Ford products, as he says, “It’s a self-fulfilling prophecy, in a way.”
More than a century later, Farley is applying the same principle to address a similar affordability crisis. After learning from older workers that young employees were taking eight-hour shifts at Amazon before clocking in seven-hour shifts at Ford for $17 an hour, surviving on minimal sleep, the company took action.
Ford made temporary workers into full-time employees, granting them eligibility for higher wages, profit-sharing, and better healthcare, a transition formalized in its 2019 United Auto Workers (UAW) contract.
Ford’s Gen Z recruitment struggle and the skilled trades gap
Despite internal reforms, Ford and the broader United States manufacturing sector face deep, systemic challenges in recruiting Gen Z.
This reluctance persists even as Ford itself struggles to fill 5,000 mechanic positions offering up to $120,000, highlighting a critical shortage in skilled trades.
Farley argues that solving this requires national investment in vocational training, citing Germany’s apprenticeship system that starts in junior high school. He noted that “Our governments have to get really serious about investing in trade schools and skilled trades.”
However, automakers are not immune to direct worker action over pay, as seen in the 2023 UAW strike involving 16,600 Ford employees.
While a new contract further shortened the path from temporary to full-time status, Farley called the strike “completely unnecessary” from management’s view. He stressed that improving trade workers’ conditions is not solely Ford’s burden, stating, “We’re not just going to hope it gets better.”
“We have the resources, and we have the know-how, after 120 years, to solve these problems, but we need more help from others,” he added.
Ford’s revival of its 1914 playbook underscores a stark admission that the core economic bargain for workers has fractured, signaling that future industrial stability will require corporations to proactively address systemic affordability—or face perpetual cycles of workforce crisis and unrest.

Independent




