Layoffs can pose both pros, cons
Layoffs can pose both pros, cons
Published: September 7, 2008
NEW YORK — U.S. companies have cut more than 550,000 jobs so far in 2008 as they try to preserve their profits in a slumping economy, but analysts say such downsizing must be done carefully for corporations to have any long-term benefits.
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Hidden costs of layoffs
Cutting jobs is a quick way to cut costs — including salaries and benefits — but Gibbs pointed out that layoffs by themselves can be expensive since many companies pay for severance and outplacement services. They can also hurt morale and productivity if remaining employees feel the layoffs were handled badly; a company may have cut its payroll costs, but if it has unhappy workers, it may end up limiting its revenue growth, as well.
Laying off skilled workers can also leave companies in a bind once the climate does get back to normal — having to hire and retrain new workers can put a business at a competitive disadvantage.
"They need to be cautious and not overreact,” Gibbs said.
It's possible for companies to avoid layoffs by involving workers in planning alternative ways of cutting expenses, Gibbs said. He cited Cleveland-based Lincoln Electric, which designs and manufactures arc welding products, as a company that works with employees to avoid layoffs.
The company, which has about 7,000 workers globally, has a "no layoffs” policy that has kept it from dismissing employees for economic reasons since the 1930s. During tough times, the company guarantees employment by shifting redundant workers to different jobs. For instance, a plant worker can be cross-trained and could move to an administrative job until the economy rebounds.
Involving work force
Even when layoffs can't be avoided, analysts say, companies that bring employees into the process of cutting costs are likely to benefit. "They'll have marvelous success if people get involved in transforming their company to become lean,” said R. Michael Donovan, a Framingham, Mass., business consultant. "They'll enjoy doing it, as long as they don't think they'll catch a bullet.”
Michael Feroli, the U.S. economist for JPMorgan Chase, believes the U.S. has another six more months before any kind of recovery will be seen. At that point, he said, the slumping housing market will begin to show some signs of life, and the global credit crisis will finally begin to resolve itself.
"As you move to a recession, not only are you trimming costs, but you are generally cutting the redundant workers,” he said.
"You end up with higher productivity in the labor force, and the downturn sows the seeds of its own upturn.”
Related Topics:
Public Finance, Business, Economic Indicators, Jobs and Labor, Labor Market, Layoffs and Downsizing, Recessions and Depressions, Job Losses


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