Holcim to Acquire German Building Materials Firm Xella in €1.85 Billion Deal
Swiss cement conglomerate Holcim has agreed to acquire German building materials manufacturer Xella for €1.85 billion, marking a significant strategic move in the European construction sector....
Wohnungsbau Sentiment Improves Despite Persistent Order Shortages
The mood in Germany's residential construction sector has improved to its highest level in over three years, according to the latest Ifo Institute survey. The business climate index for housing...
Knorr-Bremse Acquires Dutch Digital Platform TRAVIS to Expand Commercial Vehicle Services
MUNICH — Knorr-Bremse AG, the German manufacturer of braking systems for trucks and trains, announced on Monday it has agreed to acquire Dutch digital services platform TRAVIS Road Services...
Winter Sports Face Reality Check with Roller Biathlon Exhibitions
The International Biathlon Union is confronting climate change head-on with experimental roller-ski competitions, staging the Loop One Festival in Munich's Olympic Park as both a public...
Berlin Protesters Challenge Merz With Diversity Rally at Brandenburg Gate
Hundreds of demonstrators gathered at Berlin's Brandenburg Gate on Sunday evening, forming a sea of lights with mobile phone torches and lighters to protest for diversity and against racism....

German Airline Lufthansa Plans 20% Reduction in Administrative Staff Through Digitalization

29-09-2025


The Lufthansa Group has confirmed plans to eliminate 4,000 administrative positions by 2030 as part of a comprehensive cost-cutting initiative. The German airline conglomerate, based in Munich, announced that the reduction will affect approximately 20% of its administrative workforce outside direct flight operations. The move follows unconfirmed reports from the previous week that had circulated about significant job cuts within the company's administrative functions.

The restructuring plan involves extensive digitalization, automation, and consolidation of administrative processes across the organization. Lufthansa's announcement serves to formalize earlier speculation about workforce reductions that had been reported by news agencies including Reuters and German publication Handelsblatt. The company's leadership has emphasized the necessity of reducing administrative costs to improve overall efficiency and competitiveness in the challenging aviation market.

Lufthansa continues to face significant cost pressures and has struggled to return to pre-pandemic levels of capacity utilization and productivity. Unlike several other major European carriers, the company has not yet reached the operational capacity and productivity benchmarks it maintained in 2019, before the COVID-19 crisis severely impacted global air travel. The airline's financial performance has lagged behind European rivals IAG and Air France-KLM, with Lufthansa reporting a margin of just 4.4% last year.

As part of its broader transformation strategy, Lufthansa has also established new medium-term financial targets, aiming for an adjusted operating margin of 8-10% from 2028 onward. This represents an increase from the previous target of 8%, which the company had rarely achieved due to persistent high costs. The current restructuring follows earlier workforce reductions during the pandemic, when approximately 20,000 positions were cut, and recent announcements about consolidating flight network operations and IT functions across its airline subsidiaries including Swiss, Austrian, and Brussels Airlines.