Polish Amazon workers demand their salaries be doubled

‘We earn three times less than workers in Germany’

Polish Amazon workers demand their salaries be doubled
A worker sorts products at an Amazon fulfillment centre in Wroclaw, Poland, in 2015. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel

WARSAW (Reuters) — Amazon workers in Poland are demanding that their salaries be roughly doubled, the latest in a spate of labour disputes to hit the world's largest online retailer.

The demands follow strikes earlier this year in Spain and Germany, where workers demanded higher pay and better working conditions.

"We earn three times less than workers in Germany and we work longer hours," said Maria Malinowska from the Worker's Initiative union. "Amazon can't prey on the fact that it is in Poland, where wages in some regions are lower."

The Polish workers want an hourly net salary of at least 25 zlotys (C$8.79) as well as a slower work rate, changes to the way workers are assessed and the withdrawal of temporary contracts, trade unions said in a statement.

A net salary of 25 zlotys per hour would amount to around 34 zlotys (C$11.96) gross. Currently, most Amazon workers earn 17.5 (C$6.15) to 18.5 zlotys per hour gross.

The unions said that if their demands were not met within seven days, they would take the first step in a process which could ultimately result in a strike.

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