The restructuring events database contains factsheets with data on large-scale restructuring events reported in the principal national media and company websites in each EU Member State. This database was created in 2002.
Alföld és Észak; Észak-Alföld; Jász-Nagykun-Szolnok
Location of affected unit(s)
Túrkeve
Sector
(10 - 33) Manufacturing (29 - 30) Manufacture for transport equipment 29.3 - Manufacture of motor vehicle parts and accessories 29.3 - Manufacture of motor vehicle parts and accessories
100 jobs Number of planned job creations
Announcement Date
23 May 2019
Employment effect (start)
22 May 2019
Foreseen end date
22 May 2019
Description
A new production unit of MATE, a subsidiary of the Indian automotive supplier Samvardhana Motherson Group (SMG) has been built in Túrkeve and inaugurated on 22 May. The new plant will employ 100 workers. The investment cost was €16 million, and nearly €1.5 million (HUF 480 million) of which was provided by the Hungarian state.
The new production unit includes an injection moulding plant and an assembly unit. This will be the sixth production facility of the SMG in Hungary. The group already employs more than 3,000 workers at its Hungarian sites. One of the six facilities – SMR Hungary – is one of the largest rear-view mirror factories of the world. In recent years, SMG repeatedly expanded and developed its Hungarian operations.
Sources
23 May 2019: Hungarian Investment Promotion Agency (hipa.hu)
Eurofound (2019), MATE (Motherson Automotive Technologies and Engineering), Business expansion in Hungary, factsheet number 97804, European Restructuring Monitor. Dublin, https://dev.eurofound.europa.eu/restructuring-events/detail/97804.
This working paper offers a comprehensive methodological overview of the European Restructuring Monitor (ERM) databases. Even though the methodology has not changed over time, new categories have been added, and the way it has been used by researchers and policymakers...
This Eurofound research paper explores key trends in restructuring in recent years, highlighting the companies that announced the largest job losses and job gains in the EU. It builds on an analysis of company announcements recorded in Eurofound’s European Restructuring...
In 2023, thousands of workers in big tech lost their jobs. Meta, Amazon, Google, Apple, Microsoft and Salesforce had been considered to offer good and secure jobs up to this point. Giants of the information and communication technology (ICT) sector,...
In 2024, the automotive sector in the EU came to the fore in public and policy discussions. The focus was on the slowdown in electric vehicle (EV) sales, rising global competition, belated investments in new technologies, and the potential closure...
The more employee monitoring resembles surveillance – with its systematic, continuous and detailed tracking of employees' activities, behaviours or communications – the greater the potential for infringement of both privacy and data protection rights. Although the EU General Data Protection...
Since 2013, Eurofound's ERM database on restructuring-related legislation has been documenting regulatory developments in the Member States of the European Union and Norway which are explicitly or implicitly linked to anticipating and managing change. The most recent update to the...