-Caveat Lector-

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WSWS : News & Analysis : North America

US layoffs continue to mount in new year

By Shannon Jones
14 February 2002

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Job slashing is continuing at a near record pace in the United
States, undermining the claims of many analysts that the recession
has ended. In recent weeks thousands of new layoff announcements were
made in the auto industry, telecommunications, computers and
retailing. Among those companies making large job cuts were auto
parts manufacturers Lear Seating and Visteon, PC maker Gateway, the
Toys �R� Us retail chain and telecommunications firms Nextel and
Tyco.

Job cuts in January totaled 212,704, up 32 percent from December,
according to a report by the outplacement firm Challenger, Gray &
Christmas. It was the third highest monthly total since Challenger
began keeping records in 1993.

�Consumers are spending less and business is spending a lot less,� said Challenger CEO 
John Challenger. �Until this trend reverses, companies will have to find ways to 
contain costs because there is simply not enough mone
y coming in.�

According to a US Labor Department report, business cut a net of 89,000 jobs in 
January. The areas hardest hit were construction and manufacturing, including 22,000 
jobs lost in auto alone. The Labor Department noted an i
ncrease in the number of so-called discouraged workers, those who want jobs but have 
given up actively seeking work. The fall in the official unemployment rate, from 5.8 
percent in December 2001 to 5.6 percent in January,
 has been largely attributed to a drop in the labor force caused by the large number 
of discouraged workers.

Auto parts suppliers are continuing to make cutbacks in the wake of the announcement 
last month by Ford that it is eliminating 35,000 jobs. Parts suppliers are facing a 
squeeze from Ford, which has been putting pressure o
n them to cut costs. Vehicle production in North America dropped a reported 3 percent 
in the fourth quarter of 2001.

Lear Seating, based in Southfield, Michigan, said it is eliminating 6,500 jobs, about 
6 percent of its workforce, and closing 21 facilities around the world. Sixteen of the 
sites targeted for closure are in North and Sout
h America. The company is the world�s fifth largest manufacturer of auto parts. It is 
predicted the downsizing will save $40-50 million a year.

Nearly 1,600 jobs are being eliminated by Visteon, based in Dearborn, Michigan. The 
auto parts supplier, spun off by Ford in 2000, is closing a plant in Markham, Ontario 
and eliminating 400 engineering positions. The cuts
 continue a restructuring begun last year that has already resulted in more than 2,000 
job cuts.

Other auto related layoff announcements include 932 job cuts at two General Motors 
plants in St. Catherines, Ontario and the elimination of 900 jobs by Lake Forest, 
Illinois-based Tenneco Automotive.

Fiber-optic cable and wireless phone companies are continuing to shed jobs as a result 
of the worldwide crisis in the telecommunications business, highlighted by the January 
bankruptcy of Global Crossing, which threatens
the jobs of some 10,000 employees. The failure of the fiber-optic cable firm is the 
fourth largest bankruptcy in US history and comes amid charges of serious accounting 
irregularities. Global Crossing spent billions build
ing a worldwide fiber optics cable network. Its plans ultimately fell apart due to an 
oversupply of cable capacity.

In light of the revelations about Enron, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the 
Securities and Exchange Commission announced last week an investigation into Global 
Crossing. It is alleged that the firm set up fraudul
ent contracts with other telecom companies such as Qwest Communications in order to 
artificially inflate revenue.

The company was a large contributor to both the Republican and Democratic parties and 
enjoyed top-level political connections. Among its investors were former President 
George Bush and Terry McAullife, chairman of the Dem
ocratic National Committee, who sold stock before the collapse.

Wireless firm Nextel, will cut 1,700 jobs due to a restructuring plan involving the 
contracting out of its customer service operations. The change affects about 4,500 
Nextel workers, about one-third of whom will lose thei
r jobs.

Massachusetts-based telecommunications equipment maker Lucent Technologies says it 
will cut another 800 jobs by the end of March. The cuts will come at its North Andover 
facility, the bulk of them among unionized producti
on workers, members of Communications Workers of America Local 1365.

The drop in PC sales in 2001 is leading to a shakeup in the computer industry. Sales 
of computers fell 11 percent last year, the first decline in 16 years.

Hardest hit has been Gateway, the fourth largest computer manufacturer in the US, 
which is cutting 2,250 more jobs and closing 19 retail stores and three sales and 
customer support offices. The announcement follows the la
yoff last year of 7,000 workers. Gateway�s sales fell 24 percent and its market share 
dropped to just 7.4 percent.

Fremont, California-based Read-Rite is slashing 1,250 jobs in the United States and 
Thailand, 11 percent of its workforce. The company makes magnetic recording heads for 
computer hard disk drives and tape drives.

Job losses continue in the retail sector. The giant toy store chain Toys �R� Us says 
it will close 64 stores and cut 1,900 jobs. The company claims the move will allow it 
to better compete with rival Wal-Mart by focusing
on its more profitable stores. The company�s stock price rose by $1.15 after the 
announcement.

Convenience store chain 7-Eleven says it will shut down 115 to 120 of its stores 
nationwide. Its sales were relatively flat in 2001, due in part to lower gasoline 
prices affecting its stores with fuel pumps.

Office supply store Staples, meanwhile, is cutting 326 jobs and closing 30 stores due 
to weak sales. Retail giant Sears says it will eliminate another 180 department 
managers in the Atlanta, Georgia area in an expanded wa
ve of job cutting.

Cutbacks in public spending due to falling tax revenues are beginning to take a toll 
on public employees. The State of New Jersey abruptly terminated 600 technical 
workers. This followed the announcement by Democratic Gov
ernor James McGreevey that he would eliminate the Office of State Planning, charged 
with controlling urban sprawl. He has informed unions that layoffs of civil service 
employees may follow. The state faces a huge budget d
eficit.

Kathleen Bird, spokesperson for the New Jersey planning office, said �everybody was 
shocked� by news of the layoffs. She and others received a letter stating that their 
�duties and obligations to report to work cease imme
diately.� Some were numb, she said, and others wept.

The publicly funded passenger railroad service Amtrak is cutting 700 jobs in the face 
of threats by the US Congress to restructure or partially privatize its operations. 
Management says part of its planned cuts include re
ducing maintenance on train cars.

Sara Lee Corp. revealed Monday that the number of its planned layoffs was increased by 
6,200 during the last quarter of 2001, bringing the total number of employees 
eliminated to 20,470 since the Chicago-based company ann
ounced a restructuring plan in May 2000 to streamline operations.

Other recent layoff announcements include:

* Dow Corning �the Michigan-based maker of silicone products is planning to cut 700 
jobs. The company has been in Chapter 11 bankruptcy since 1995

* Xcel Energy is cutting 500 jobs in Denver, Colorado and Minneapolis, Minnesota. The 
firm suffered losses due to bad debts related to the Enron bankruptcy.

* After losing $1.59 a share in the fourth quarter, Constellation Energy says it will 
cut 435 more jobs and terminate several power plant projects. �We are experiencing the 
collapse of a speculative bubble,� said the comp
any�s CEO Mayo Shuttuck III.

* The online real estate company Homestore.com is cutting 300 jobs as it struggles to 
stay in business. The company�s stock fell to an all-time low of $1.12.

* Janus Mutual Funds, a unit of Stilwell Financial, is cutting 222 jobs at its Denver, 
Colorado operation center.






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