-Caveat Lector-

>From World Socialist Web Site www.wsws.org
WSWS : News & Analysis : North America
Slumping US economy spurs new round of international job-cutting
By Jerry White
28 July 2001
Back to screen version| Send this link by email | Email the author
Corporations in the US, Europe and Asia announced a wave of
mass layoffs this week affecting tens of thousands of workers in
telecommunications, computers, chemicals and other industries.
The layoffs coincided with the release of several second quarter
reports showing staggering corporate losses and a US government
report showing that the American economy slowed to a meager 0.7
percent growth rate in the spring, the weakest performance in eight
years.
The growth in US Gross Domestic Product in the April through
June quarter followed an 1.3 percent increase in the first quarter
and was the poorest showing in the US�s yearlong economic
slowdown, the Commerce Department reported. The slow growth
was produced in large part from a 13.6 percent decline in capital
spending by businesses, the sharpest reduction since the spring of
1982, when the country was mired in the worst recession since
World War II.
These and other indicators confirm warnings that the US Federal
Reserve Board�s repeated interest rate cuts�the most rapid rate
reduction on record�have failed to reverse the economic slowdown.
Average profits for large US companies listed on the Standard &
Poor 500 are expected to drop by more than 17 percent in the
second quarter, which would be the worst decline since the 1990-
91 recession. Economists say that the current quarter, which ends
September 30, does not look any brighter, suggesting that there
will be further deep job cuts throughout the economy.
The Fed�s rate cuts have also failed to this point to reduce the
value of the dollar overseas, a measure which is crucial to boost
exports by American manufacturers. With European and Asian
markets slowing and investors fearful of the economic instability in
Argentina, Turkey and other developing countries, the dollar has
remained a safe haven even as the US economic growth has
slowed to nearly a halt. The dollar has appreciated against other
currencies, especially the euro, making it harder for American
manufacturers to compete in export markets. It has also reducing
profits earned abroad by US companies when they are converted
back into dollars.
At the same time, any significant decline in the dollar�combined
with the slumping US economy, falling stock prices and lower
interest rates�may threaten to create a massive pullout by foreign
creditors, with devastating consequences for the US and world
economy.
The US slowdown has affected Europe and Asia far more quickly
than expected. Allen Yurko, the head of UK-based Invensys
computer consulting firm�which announced 2,500 job cuts
Tuesday�said in previous recessions Europe would have followed
the US downturn about a year later. This time, he said, �we are
seeing Europe repeat the experience in the US in only three or four
months.� Yurko added that the world faced a �recession of relatively
significant magnitude� in coming months.
According to Forbes Magazine, more than 50,000 job cuts were
announced on July 26 alone, on what the magazine described as
�Black Thursday.� Among the biggest jobs cuts were those
announced by the French telecommunications group Alcatel, which
said it was laying off 14,000 workers�for a total of 20,000 for the
year. ABB, a Swiss-Swedish engineering combine, and Ericsson,
Swedish maker of mobile phones, both announced 12,000 job
losses. Fujitsu, the Japanese chipmaker, said it was offering �early
retirement� to 9,000 workers.
In North America, Lucent Technologies, the troubled telecom-
equipment maker, announced it was shedding another 20,000 off
its staff, and JDS Uniphase, the world�s largest supplier of fiber-
optic components, said it was cutting 16,000 jobs. Computer
maker Hewlett-Packard warned of lower revenue and said it would
let 6,000 workers go.
Lucent, the once highly profitable spin-off from AT&T, had already
announced 24,500 job cuts. The company�s $3.25 billion second
quarter loss was part of a series of massive losses announced by
telecom companies worldwide, which are in a slump due to
declining business investment and a glut of the technology
internationally. Equipment maker Avaya, which was spun off from
Lucent last year, announced it would lay off 2,000 workers, in
addition to the 3,000 job cuts previously reported.
On Thursday JDS Uniphase announced a $44.8 billion loss�the
largest in business history�in large part because of a write-off on
the overinflated value of companies it acquired during two years in
which its stocks were booming. Other losses included: fiber optic
maker Corning ($4.76 billion), Germany�s Siemens ($1.4 billion),
France�s Alcatel ($2.75 billion) and Canada�s Nortel Networks,
which lived up to warnings and announced it lost $19.4 billion in the
second quarter. In addition, three big US telecommunications
companies�AT&T, BellSouth and WorldCom�all announced
losses.
Announcing Hewlett Packard�s job cuts Thursday, CEO Carly
Fiorna said, �Economies around the world continue to weaken,�
adding, �I do not expect a second-half recovery in 2001.� HP�s job
cuts come on top of 4,700 already announced this year, as well as
the company�s suggestion that employees take a �voluntary� wage
cut of 10 percent or take unpaid vacations to avoid layoffs. The PC
market in general has been hit by a sharp reduction in business
spending, with Compaq Computers and Dell Computer also
announcing thousands of layoffs earlier this year.
The nation�s fourth-largest air carrier, Northwest Airlines, said it will
cut 1,500 jobs, reduce its flight schedule and close some facilities
to reduce its costs by $135 million this fiscal year. Northwest said
the move was precipitated by continued cutbacks in business
travel as a result of weakness in the US economy, as well as by
persistently high fuel costs. After six consecutive years of profits
the airline industry is poised to lose $1.4 billion this year, the
largest amount since the Persian Gulf War and the recession of
the early 1990s.
DuPont, the number one US chemical company, also announced
this week that it would eliminate 1,500 more jobs due to a weak
demand for chemicals and plastics used in everything from car
manufacturing, to apparel, to construction projects. The increase
will bring the number of job cuts announced since April to 5,500
employees and another 1,300 contract workers. The company
posted a $213 million loss in the second quarter and warned that
third-quarter earnings would be even worse, dropping as much as
70 percent from a year ago. The drop in demand, coupled with
rising prices for crude oil and natural gas, has also hit Dupont�s
competitors, Dow Chemical and Germany�s BASF AG and Bayer
AG.
In his testimony before the Senate Banking Committee earlier this
week Federal Reserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan argued
that interest rate cuts were having their desired effect and would
take some time to work their way through the economy. Pointing to
continued spending, particularly for housing and cars, Greenspan
sought to reassure the Senators, saying, �the fabric of consumer
confidence had not been breached.�
Greenspan and others have continued to point to consumer
spending as a potential engine for economic recovery. In fact,
consumer spending rose by only 2 percent in the second quarter,
far lower than the 7.6 percent increase during the boom days of
early 2000. More importantly, however, many analysts are pointing
to the fact that much of the consumer spending is being fueled by
levels of debt that cannot possibly be sustained as unemployment
rises. Moreover, the wages and benefits of American workers
continue to stagnate, rising at a smaller than expected 0.9 percent
in the second quarter.
The credit rating agency Standard & Poor said this week it expects
consumer bankruptcies and credit card charge-offs�already at
record levels�to rise in coming quarters, due mainly to growing
joblessness.
�The economic slowdown is pushing highly leveraged consumers
into default and bankruptcies,� said S&P�s chief economist David
Wyss. �Although most Americans are in healthy financial shape,
thanks in part to the stock market boom of the late 1990s, a
significant number borrowed more than they could afford to pay
back.� Wyss said he expects personal bankruptcies to rise by 20
percent this year, compared to a small decline in 2000.
A short list of other layoffs announced this week gives a glimpse of
the economic insecurity faced by millions of workers. These
include:
American Express Co. said Wednesday it plans to cut another
4,000 to 5,000 jobs in a bid to cut costs amid a lingering economic
slowdown and plans to take a big write-down on the value of its
investment portfolio.
Data storage maker Iomega Corp., best known for its Zip storage
drive, announced a second quarter loss and a restructuring that will
eliminate up to 1,100 jobs, or one-third of its workforce.
Tractor-trailer manufacturer Wabash National Corp., which sells
under the Wabash and Fruehauf brands, plans to close a plant in
southeast Iowa, eliminating 250 jobs.
International Paper is closing a plant in Clinton, Iowa and
eliminating about 335 jobs at the facility that makes packaging for
the food service industry, including such customers as McDonald�s
and Taco Bell. The plant closing would bring International Paper�s
job cuts this year to nearly 4,000. Earlier this month the company
announced it would cut production at two of its paper mills in
Savannah, Georgia and Corinth, New York, resulting in 655 layoffs.
That came a month after 3,000 layoffs of salaried employees.
Copyright 1998-2001
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/";>www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance�not soap-boxing�please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'�with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds�is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html";>Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/";>ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to