-Caveat Lector-

>From www.wsws.org
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North America
Lucent Technologies to cut 15,000 to 20,000 more jobs
By Paul Scherrer
30 July 2001
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Lucent Technologies, the US’s largest manufacturer of
telecommunications equipment, plans to lay off 15,000 to 20,000
workers by the end of this year, in addition to the 24,500 it had
announced earlier this year. In addition to these layoffs, the
company will also eliminate another 10,500 jobs through the sale of
its fiber unit and two manufacturing plants.
Since January the company—a spin-off of AT&T, which until
recently had been highly profitable—has laid off 10,500 workers,
forced another 8,500 to take early retirements and fired 5,500
contract employees. When the job cuts and selling of the two units
are complete, Lucent will be left with fewer than half of the 123,000
employees it had when the year began.
The Lucent announcement comes just a little more than a month
after Nortel, the world’s largest telecommunications equipment
manufacturer, reported a $19.2 billion loss and the layoff of 10,000
workers, bringing its total job cuts to 30,000 since January. The
same week Lucent announced its layoffs, tens of thousands of
layoffs were announced throughout the slumping international
telecom industry, including by France’s Alcatel, which eliminated
10,000 jobs in addition to the 5,800 cuts made earlier this year.
“Nobody knows what will happen to them,” said Randy, a Lucent
technician in Pittsburgh. “I don’t care how many years you have or
how much you know, nobody is safe.”
The company gave laid-off workers 30 to 60 days to find another
job, “but given the tight budget constraints of all departments that
was not very likely,” said a company spokesperson Bill Price.
Workers who took the early retirement had less than a month to
make up their minds to leave the company or take a chance that
their jobs would remain.
“It was a hard decision for people,” said Randy. “Many of these
people had put their whole lives into this company, yet they are too
young to retire and too old to start a new job.”
In a separate deal, Lucent announced that it is selling two of its
manufacturing plants, one in Oklahoma City and the other in
Columbus, Ohio. Under the deal with Canadian-based, Celestica
Inc., Lucent will sell the two plants and then buy back the
products. Celestica, a company that specializes in running
manufacturing operations, will be given a free hand in cutting costs
to make the plants profitable.
In a further blow, hundreds of thousands of current and retired
AT&T and Lucent workers have seen the value of their 401K
retirement plans sink as the price of both stocks have dropped
sharply. “People have lost most of what they saved up,” said
Randy. “Guys who would have had some money when they got laid
off will now have to go looking for another job.”
Lucent was formed in 1996 when AT&T spun off its equipment
manufacturing and research facilities into a separate company. For
the first few years, Lucent reported record profits and its stock
skyrocketed in price as demand for telecommunications equipment
mushroomed. Beginning last year, however, orders and revenues
began to fall.
Lucent lost $3.25 billion during the second quarter in revenues,
which fell 22 percent from last year. Reflecting the severe slump
that has overtaken the telecommunications industry in the US,
revenues from domestic sales were down a staggering 38 percent.
In a teleconference with Wall Street investors and journalists, Chief
Executive and Chairperson Henry Schacht refused to project
revenues for the third quarter. He warned that further job cuts and
restructuring may be coming. “I am pleased with the progress we
have made on all points of Phase I of our restructuring program,”
Schacht said. “However, we intend to go deeper with a new phase
of our restructuring to reshape Lucent for future growth and
profitability even more quickly.”
Lucent stock has lost more than 90 percent of its value since its
high in December 1999. Last month both Moody’s and Standard &
Poor’s investment services downgraded the company’s bond rating
to junk status, with S&P putting the company on its negative credit
watch.
Considered a shining example of the vast profits to be made in
telecommunications only two years ago, Lucent has fallen prey to
a sharp reduction of capital spending by businesses being hit by
the worldwide economic slowdown. At the same time, the slumping
telecom sector has become a major force in a further undermining
of the global economy.
Since the beginning of the year, telecom service providers and
equipment makers have announced 225,000 job cuts, according to
a tally compiled by the Wall Street Journal. This far surpasses the
134,000 jobs destroyed at dot-com companies since December
1999 and represents one fifth of all job cuts in the US.
During the 1990s the telecom industry saw a rapid expansion as it
moved to meet growing demand, particularly in data and wireless
services. Hundreds of billions of dollars were poured into the
industry. The industry is now suffering from a crisis of overcapacity
due to the unplanned and chaotic growth each manufacturer, long
distance service and Internet provider went through to capture
market share from their competitors. The fall-off in production and
profits has produced an exponential decline in orders for telecom
equipment and new services, leaving much of this additional
capacity idle.
As part of the restructuring plan, Lucent also announced it was
selling its fiber cable business for $2.75 billion. Last year this was
valued at $9 billion and just this past March, Lucent rejected a $4
billion bid for it. Earlier this month Corning, the largest producer of
fiber optic cable, announced multibillion-dollar losses and mass
layoffs. The company recently stopped work on a half-finished plant
in Scranton, Pennsylvania.
The combined market value of telecommunications providers and
equipment manufacturers is down $2 trillion since its high in March
of last year, representing 90 percent of the net loss of stocks
during that period. The drop in the value of AT&T and Lucent
stocks—two of the most widely held in the country—has not only
wiped out the savings of hundreds of thousands of telecom retirees,
but also the savings of millions of other small investors.
Another aspect of the collapse of the industry is the squandering of
vast amounts of scientific knowledge. Many of the best scientific
minds, recruited during the period of hothouse growth in the
industry, have been dispensed with. Bell Labs—once one of the
leading research institutions, not only in the field of
telecommunication but all physical sciences—has become a shell
of its former self under Lucent management and its singular drive to
boost profit by cutting costs.
Copyright 1998-2001
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved

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