Money | Boeing Boeing Yanks Its 'Best Offer' to Striking Workers Takes 30% pay increase off the table By Kate Seamons Posted Oct 9, 2024 8:51 AM CDT Copied A Boeing worker waves a picket sign Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2024, as workers continue to strike outside the company's factory in Renton, Wash. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson) Boeing made a "best and final offer" to 33,000 striking workers in late September. It's now yanked it off the table. The Guardian reports the company has withdrawn it's 30% pay increase offer, which would have been phased in over four years, after talks reached a stalemate. The company says that after Monday and Tuesday talks with the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM) went nowhere, no further negotiations are planned. More: What the IAM wants: A 40% increase and a defined-benefit pension brought back. It has branded Boeing as being "hell-bent on standing on the non-negotiated offer." What Boeing says it offered: Boeing said average annual pay for machinists would jump from $75,608 to $111,155 at the close of the four-year contract, per the AP. Boeing's take: The company's Commercial Airplanes CEO, Stephanie Pope, said in a letter to employees that "the union did not seriously consider our proposals" made this week, which she said included "new and improved proposals to try to reach a compromise, including increases in take-home pay and retirement. ... Further negotiations do not make sense at this point and our offer has been withdrawn." The IAM's take: The union countered that Boeing "refused to propose any wage increases" or changes to benefits like sick leave and pension contributions. The impact: The AP notes the IAM represents the workers who assemble some of Boeing's primary planes, and has brought production of 737s, 777s, and 767s to a halt. CNBC reports S&P Global Ratings on Tuesday put the cost of the stoppage at more than $1 billion per month. Boeing's stock was down slightly, at about 3%, at the market's open on Wednesday. Read These Next Cruise passenger, reportedly left behind on island, is found dead. As Trump visits Japan, auto diplomacy is afoot. Monstrous Hurricane Melissa makes landfall in Jamaica. Bill Gates wants less 'doomsday' talk on climate change. Report an error