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WSWS : News & Analysis : North America
US job cuts approach 1 million in 2001
By Jerry White
14 August 2001
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US companies last month announced plans to cut 205,975 jobs, the largest
single month total in nearly a decade, according to a survey released last
week by the job outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas. July’s job
cuts pushed the 2001 total to just 17,000 short of 1 million layoffs. By
comparison in 1990-91, the last time the US was hit by a recession, the
largest number of jobs lost in a single year was 555,000.
The destruction of jobs hit the manufacturing and technology sector hardest
as US businesses—which had expanded rapidly in the 1990s—sharply
reduced capital spending, particularly for computers and telecommunications
equipment. The latest round of job cutting coincided with a series of reports
of huge profit losses by Cisco Systems, Lucent Technologies and other high-
tech companies, as well as lower than expected earnings warnings by
corporations across virtually every sector of the slowing US economy.
Some analysts had pointed to the fact that the official unemployment rate
remained at 4.5 percent in July as a sign that the economy was stabilizing.
However, last month’s rate reflected several seasonal factors, in addition to
the narrow scope of the survey on which the jobless figures are based.
According to Challenger, job cuts in July were actually 65 percent higher
than the previous month and 222 percent more than in July 2000.
The increase indicates that US companies are not counting on a rebound in
the second half of the year despite repeated rate cuts by the Federal
Reserve Board, which is expected to reduce interest rates again when it
meets later this month. “If companies were anticipating a 2001 turnaround,
with an increase in demand for goods and services, we would not be
witnessing the extraordinary number of job cuts that are taking place this
year,” said the firm’s CEO, John A. Challenger.
US manufacturing companies—also being hit by the strong dollar, which
makes exports more expensive—continue to be mired in a yearlong slump.
Since April 1998, the portion of American jobs in manufacturing has fallen to
13 percent from 15 percent, according to Jared Bernstein, an economist at
the Economic Policy Institute in Washington. It is “an extraordinary shift over
a relatively short time,” he said.
Telecommunications, computer and electronics makers have eliminated
358,375 workers since the beginning of the year. The next two industries
hardest hit by job cuts are automotive and industrial goods, where 171,685
employees have been axed.
The weakness in the manufacturing sector—which in addition to the layoffs
has also led to reduced work hours and lost overtime—is now moving to
other areas of the economy, according to the Federal Reserve Board’s
summary of regional economic conditions released last week. The report,
also known as the Beige Book and compiled from anecdotal evidence from
the Fed’s 12 district banks, said many regions reported a drop in demand for
office space and trucking and shipping services. In addition, the report said
the slowdown has also spread to retail sales, one important component of
demand that had held up during the yearlong economic slowdown.
Rising vacancies of commercial real estate have put a halt to new
construction activity in many regions, according to the report, and tourism
and the demand for business services, such as advertising, computing and
data processing, continue to decline.
The shakeout in the dot.com and telecommunications sector is taking a
tremendous human toll, with tens of thousands of workers losing their jobs or
being forced to take huge pay cuts. In addition, businesses that rely on
these industries are suffering from the ripple effect.
One area hard hit is the northern suburbs of Dallas, Texas, known as the
Telecom Corridor. The unemployment rate in the area, which includes the
cities of Richardson and Plano, has jumped by 50 percent in the last six
months, with more than 10,000 workers losing their jobs at companies like
Nortel, Alcatel and Ericsson. Workers have also seen a huge fall in the value
of the stocks they were compensated with, including 401(K) retirement
plans. Vacancy rates in the two cities have more than doubled in the last
year, with tenants vacating about 580,000 feet of office space, the rough
equivalent of a 30-story building.
Reports about Silicon Valley refer to the “brutal summer of 2001,” with huge
layoffs not only at failing dot.com start-ups, but at companies previously
considered relatively safe from layoffs, such as Hewlett Packard. Since the
NASDAQ hit its all-time high on March 10, 2000, the stock wealth of the 100
biggest technology companies in northern California has dropped by a
staggering $2 trillion.
In the Silicon Valley and San Francisco, home to most of the dot.com
businesses that have gone bust, the number of unemployed people has gone
from 29,400 last December to 85,600 in July. The area’s unemployment rate
is now higher than the national figure. In the South of the Market
neighborhood of San Francisco commercial vacancies have risen to 20
percent from a record low of 0.6 percent only 18 months ago.
Downtown San Jose restaurants that used to serve $34.50 porterhouse
steaks and $150 bottles of wine to customers paying with their stock-option
bonuses have seen a huge decline in business, as laid-off dot.comers take
pay cuts of $30,000 or more to find new employment. A recent article in the
Seattle Times noted the rise in homelessness and threatened suicides in
Santa Clara County, the center of the Silicon Valley. “Top consultants and
contractors once named their salaries in the valley,” the article said. “Now
even those who qualify for unemployment benefits soon discover the $40 to
$230 weekly check will not cover an apartment here, where rents average
about $1,800 a month.”
Nearly 30 unemployed tech workers are among the 100 men at the
Montgomery Street Inn and other homeless shelters in San Jose, run by
InnVision. Robbie Reinhart, director of the organization, commented, “They’re
not what we used to call hobos on the street. Most have college degrees.”
Labor flexibility
The slowdown of the US economy is occurring simultaneously with a
downturn in Europe, Asia and Latin America. As the global economy slows
multinational corporations seeking to slash payrolls are exploiting the fact
that US labor laws and the acquiescence of the American trade unions make
it easier and cheaper to cut jobs in the US than in Europe and Japan. A
recent Washington Post article noted that French telecom giant Alcatel,
German chemical company BASF AG and US-based Delphi Automotive
Systems and Lucent Technologies were firing a disproportionate number of
American workers and closing more plants in the US than elsewhere.
One major reason is the use of temporary and contract workers, which make
up a large portion of corporate America’s much hailed “flexible labor force.”
Companies can dispense with such workers with little or no severance
packages or other benefits viewed as obstacles to US competitiveness. A
soon to be released survey of 3,000 companies conducted by the US
Census Bureau found that on a typical day these companies—which
represent a cross-section of the US economy—used temps and contract
workers to meet 12 percent of their manpower needs. On peak days, their
use reached 20 percent.
In July, employment in temporary agencies and other “help supply” services
declined for the tenth month in a row—for a total job loss of 429,000 over the
period—as manufacturers and other employers face falling demand for their
products and shed employees.
Jerry Jasinowski, president of the National Association of Manufacturers, told
the Post, “Although CEO’s claim to make global reductions even-handedly,
in fact they move much more gingerly in those countries where there are
tighter restrictions because they know they’re going to end up with a bigger
headache. You get all this kickback in Europe. Here, in the US, there’s more
acceptance to the idea of economic change.”
At the same time, despite certain impediments, multinational employers are
also carrying out mass layoffs in Germany, France and other European
countries. Last week US companies announced the elimination of hundreds
of jobs in Europe, including at Gateway Computer, which is shutting down its
Irish and British headquarters, eliminating at least 850 jobs, and Lucent
Technologies, which is firing 550 workers in France.
Other layoffs announced last week include:
Bayer AG announced it is slashing 1,800 jobs and shuttering 15 plants in the
US and Europe in an effort to recover from the recall of a lucrative anti-
cholesterol drug linked to deaths in the US. The German-based company
said second-quarter profits had fallen by 45 percent and also warned of lower
than expected profits for the year.
Exide Technologies, a leading maker of automotive batteries, said it would
cut 1,300 jobs and that second-quarter earnings would be lower than
expected because of falling orders from telecommunications customers. The
Princeton, New Jersey-based company had already cut 1,800 jobs as of
March and closed four factories.
United States Automobile Association, a mutual insurance and financial
services company, plans to cut 1,370 jobs, mostly at its San Antonio, Texas
headquarters.
High-speed Internet access company Rhythms NetConnections Inc. said it
will end service in a month and fire 700 employees, or 75 percent of its
workforce.
Gap Inc., the No. 1 US apparel chain, said it planned to eliminate an
additional 790 jobs as part of its efforts cut costs and shore up profits. The
announcement follows San Francisco-based Gap’s news release stating that
it already eliminated 1,300 corporate jobs in the month of July, cutting its
workforce by 10 percent.
Spartanburg, South Carolina-based Mayfair Mills Inc. laid off about half of its
825 employees, as the company seeks financing to prevent bankruptcy.
Remaining workers will take leaves of absence in the coming weeks. In
March, the company closed three other plants in South Carolina and
Georgia, eliminating 425 jobs. Mayfair’s layoffs come amid a downturn in the
textile industry, with 15 plants announcing layoffs in South Carolina this year
alone.
Safety rating company Underwriters Laboratories Inc. is cutting 375 jobs in a
move the company said would make it more cost-effective. UL said 110 of
the job cuts were at its headquarters in Northbrook, while the remainder were
outside of Illinois
Chicago-based Focal Communications Corp., which provides local telephone
and Internet access services to businesses, on Wednesday posted a wider
second-quarter loss on a 35 percent increase in revenues, and made plans
to cut 175 jobs, or 13 percent of its workforce.
Dallas-based Wyndham International Inc. has laid off 850 headquarters staff
and hotel managers this year, or about 3 percent of its workforce, to deal
with a downturn in business travel caused by the slow economy.
Huntsman Corp. says 700 employees will be offered early retirement in a bid
to cut costs at the Salt Lake City, Utah-based chemical company.
DaimlerChrysler’s Freightliner unit is eliminating 123 jobs at its Gastonia,
North Carolina truck parts factory because of slow sales. In addition, the US
Chrysler unit said it will reduce manufacturing costs by $1 billion this year,
double its original estimate, by reducing payments to suppliers and lowering
labor costs.
Copyright 1998-2001
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved

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