SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: puborectalis who wrote (168659)8/7/2001 8:55:59 PM
From: ColtonGang  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769667
 
Where are Bush's plans to end the recession, energy crisis, stop war in the middle east, and reduce poverty?????????????????????????Announced Job Cuts at Record High
Economy: Survey tracks 205,975 planned reductions in July. Whether pace is slowing is a matter of speculation.



By LISA GIRION, TIMES STAFF WRITER

Corporate misery spiked in July as U.S. companies, led by the telecommunications and computer sectors, announced plans to cut 205,975 jobs--a 65% increase over June and more than three times as many as a year ago, according to an unofficial survey released Monday.

The July total was the highest since the Chicago-based outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas began compiling the data in 1993. It brings the total announced job cuts for 2001 to 983,337, far ahead of the 677,795 announced cuts in 1998, the previous record.

The July report "provides further support that labor market conditions are softening, and we have not seen the bottom yet," said Anthony Karydakis, economist at Banc One Capital Markets in Chicago. "What this tells you is businesses view economic conditions in the near term as shaky." The question, Karydakis said, "is whether the pace of the erosion is slowing. Are we still getting a deterioration in labor market conditions as fast as we were earlier in the year? There are some signs-- the Challenger survey not withstanding--that the pace may be slowing."

He said those indicators included the government employment report issued Friday that showed a more moderate decline in nonfarm payrolls for July than June and the jobless rate holding steady at 4.5%.

The job cut announcements tracked by Challenger represent the intentions of businesses and do not always result in layoffs. Cuts can include buyouts, attrition, outsourcing and other means of reducing staffing. Challenger's report is not seasonally adjusted, is limited to job cuts announced publicly and does not include private and smaller companies that make no announcements.

Still, some economists say the Challenger numbers could indicate a continued slowdown.

"Usually in a recession, the job cuts happen after the stock market drops and after output slows down and stops growing," said Alec Levenson, an economist with USC's Marshall School of Business. "And unemployment peaks after the stock market drops to the lowest point and after output has started to rebound. So, if indeed we are on our way into a recession, then this is consistent."

July's numbers included many companies cutting jobs for the second or third times, said John A. Challenger, chief executive of the firm that puts out the report.

"Everybody's been hoping we'd have this V-like recession, that it would slow down quickly and bounce back," he said. "And I think it is slowly dawning on people that it's going to be a long digging-out process. These numbers suggest things are still getting worse.

"Maybe those Federal Reserve rate cuts are going to sink in in early 2002 and turn us around," Challenger said. "I just hope they are not like some antibiotic that's lost its strength against some new kind of economic flu we're in now."