Starlim Baas Thomas Bründl followed Stefan Pierer on Tuesday afternoon as president of the Upper Austria Industrial Association and therefore as the “speaker” of the domestic industry. His first performance? Between analysis and tackling. If he taps, read here.
Only the general meeting in Lecture Hall 1 of the Johannes Kepler Uni, then a press conference in the University Center, later the reception in Kepler-Hall with things and politics: Schlag went on Tuesday for Thomas Bründl, as soon as he was chosen as new president of the Upper Industrial Association. Stefan Pierer followed the Starlim boss.
The new beginning – at least when the first appearance is much diplomatic and softer than in the era before. “It would be completely wrong and not authentic to copy Stefan Pierer, but we will be the subjects that have the upper hand, tackle and show,” said Bründl. The high wage, energy and bureaucracy costs, the competition of China- The pain points are varied.
“Have praised us from the market”
“We have lived a bit in the comfort zone for 30 years, but the framework conditions have changed,” warned Bründl. Nache: “The wage costs have come out of the lead and the band. We actually praised ourselves from the market.”
F. Peter Mittterbauer, who, just like Herbert Eibensteiner and Elisabeth Engelbrechtsssmüller-Strauß, also clear words vice-president of the Industrial Association was: “What we do is not work for work.
“Nobody waits for us”
Bründl: “We have heard for two or three years that there is light at the end of the tunnel. I don’t want to wait for us to get out of the tunnel, want to steer and shape. If we are left behind, no one waits for us. The others are about rolling up the sleeves.”
Source: Krone

I’m Ben Stock, a journalist and author at Today Times Live. I specialize in economic news and have been working in the news industry for over five years. My experience spans from local journalism to international business reporting. In my career I’ve had the opportunity to interview some of the world’s leading economists and financial experts, giving me an insight into global trends that is unique among journalists.