03 mei 2022
02:00
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Guido Vanherpe, the CEO of La Lorraine, is experiencing some of the most turbulent times in his career. The hole that corona had made, Belgium’s largest baker was able to close last year. But the war in Ukraine forced him to halt construction of his factory in Russia. ‘Nevertheless, our ambition to achieve a turnover of 1 billion euros remains achievable.’
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With a turnover of 885 million euros and 4,300 employees, La Lorraine is the largest baker in Belgium. It supplies bread and bakery products to the supermarket chains Delhaize and Carrefour and owns the Panos stores. Even in Turkey, La Lorraine sells bread.
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Yet the family business of the East Flemish Vanherpe family has not been spared the capricious recent world history. It is experiencing major consequences of the war in Ukraine. As soon as Russia became an international pariah with the invasion of Ukraine in February, La Lorraine decided to build his Russian factory. on hold to put. The workforce in the country fell from fifty to ten people. A tough decision, because the construction works were already half finished and La Lorraine saw a new growth pole in Russia. Before the war, the country accounted for 3 percent of the turnover. In time, that share could double.
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‘Automatic wage indexation is a good system’
Inflation not only makes raw materials much more expensive, but also personnel. Certainly in Belgium, where wages automatically follow the index. La Lorraine CEO Guido Vanherpe is in favor of automatic wage indexation. ‘The system creates trust. It protects purchasing power.’
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Vanherpe is not in favor of an index jump, but neither does he support the call from some left-wing political parties to raise wages further on top of wage indexation. ‘It is better to give people who are having a hard time in the short term a one-off premium on top of indexation, for example for the suddenly rising energy costs.’
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He is also not in favor of taxing richer Belgians and companies with high profits extra in order to reduce the government debt increased by corona. ‘Belgian taxes are already high for everyone today. In order to reduce the national debt, we mainly need growth. You get that by giving companies the space to do business and to invest.’
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But CEO Guido Vanherpe is not giving up on his Russian dream just yet. “We hope to resume construction as soon as the situation returns to normal. We expect it to take at least six months to a year before we can make a decision.’
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Russia is and remains an interesting growth country, says the entrepreneur. ‘The middle class is growing there and Russians eat a lot of bread. They are looking for high quality products. We can offer them that.’
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Despite his positivism, the entrepreneur takes into account that La Lorraine will have to turn his back on Russia for good. The war could escalate further. But a withdrawal doesn’t have to be a disaster. The investment costs are included for the time being. This concerns about 15 percent of the budget that we invest annually at group level. The Russian factory is in good condition and guarded. It’s not a lost investment.’ In other words, the factory is salable if the company leaves Russia.
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Grow in the East
La Lorraine can rely on its extensive expansion to sustain growth without Russia. Once it set up a frozen bread factory in Erpe-Mere in the 1980s, it started exporting to neighboring countries. And from there it went on and on. From 2000 it opened factories in the Czech Republic, Poland, Romania and later in Turkey.
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We invest in digitization. Panos will have an online store, where companies can order breakfast and lunch.