|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : World
Economy
IBM announces 13,000 job cuts
By David Walsh
6 May 2005
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
International Business Machines announced plans May 4 to eliminate
up to 13,000 jobs, or 4 percent of its workforce, primarily in
Western Europe. IBM has approximately 100,000 employees in Europe,
the Middle East and Africa, and 319,000 overall in some 170 countries
worldwide. The company is the worlds largest in the field
of information technology; its 2003 revenues were $89 billion.
IBM officials told analysts during a conference call May 5
that they hoped the job cuts would save the firm $300 million
to $500 million this year, and two and a half times that amount
in 2006. The job elimination is the most serious at IBM since
May 2002, when some 15,600 posts were wiped out.
The cuts come in the wake of IBMs disappointing first-quarter
earnings, which sent shockwaves through Wall Street
in mid-April. At the time the company reported an increase in
revenue of 3.3 percent over a year earlier, but more than two-thirds
of the rise was due to currency shifts. IBM reported per share
earnings of $0.84 (up from $0.79 a year ago), only 50 percent
of the increase analysts had predicted. Investors proceeded to
punish the firms stock, which fell 14 consecutive days last
month; its price is down 22 percent for the year.
IBM officials attributed the disappointing earnings figures
to troubles it experienced in closing deals; sales of mainframe
computers were also down by 16 percent. Samuel Palmisano, IBM
chairman and chief executive officer, commented in April that
we had difficulty closing transactions in the final weeks
of the quarter, especially in countries with soft economic conditions.
The latter comment presumably referred to Western Europe in particular.
Palmisano pointed to the companys gains in the emerging
markets of China, Brazil, India and Eastern Europe.
The information technology giant began laying off workers in
Western Europe even before the earnings report was issued; 500
Swedish workers were dismissed in March, 9 percent of the workforce
in the area. That same month IBM reported that 580 jobs would
be cut from two locations in Germany, Schweinfurt and Hannover.
IBM officials claimed this week that the plan to slash as many
as 13,000 jobs was not a response to the April earnings bombshell,
but rather part of a plan to increase global efficiency. In fact,
the move may be a response to both short-term investor unhappiness
and longer-term economic tendencies.
At a press briefing Thursday, IBMs Chief Financial Officer
Mark Loughridge refused to say where jobs would be slashed. He
merely indicated that Europe would bear the brunt of the cuts
and that the first workers to go would clear their desks by the
end of June. We anticipate that most of these objectives
can be achieved through voluntary programs, he asserted.
Various press commentators noted that European labor rules would
make the task of eliminating positions somewhat more time-consuming
and costly. The company is relying on the various trade unions
and works councils to suppress opposition to the job cuts, which
sparked protests in Germany and strikes in France in April.
A spokesman for Britains white-collar union Amicus complained
about IBMs dragging out the uncertainty. One of the facilities
rumored to be threatened is in Greenock, Scotland. The union official
told the Register in Britain, This is another example
of a company whose staff are staring into the void while their
jobs are hanging by a thread. It [the press briefing] was merely
a re-run of yesterdays announcement and made purely for
the benefit of business analysts and not staff.
If the jobs announcement was intended to bolster IBMs
share price, it failed on its first day at least. Company shares
fell nearly 2 percent May 5. Wall Street expects IBM revenue to
grow by only 2.5 percent this year. Reuters cited the comments
of Mark Stahlman, an analyst with Caris & Co: IBM is
going to have to demonstrate, not just describe, significant top
line growth in order for investors to run back into the stock.
No doubt relentless global economic processes are also taking
their toll on the Armonk, New York-based company. In January IBM
began to eliminate administrators at its decades-old European
headquarters in a Paris suburb (Reuters). The New
York Times commented May 5, The job cuts, the company
said, are primarily in administrative offices in European countries
that were set up in the postwar years to serve those markets,
which were growing rapidly. IBM executives said those national
and regional administrative centers were being dismantled. That
older style of multinational corporation, they said, is being
replaced by a leaner global operation, with work being sent digitally
across the Internet to where it can be done most efficiently.
The company intends to create teams that work across borders
and more directly with customers. IBMs Loughridge told the
press, In this new European model there is no longer a need
for a pan-European management layer.
IBM is less dependent today on manufacturing, notes the Times,
than it was in the heyday of mainframe computers.... Increasingly,
IBM researchers and software programmers are put to work for customers
redesigning and automating business tasks like procurement, accounting
and customer service.
The company faces severe competition from low-cost rivals like
Dell, as well as outsourcing companies in India.
IBM realized less than $293,000 in sales per employee in 2004,
compared with $891,000 for each worker at Dell, $529,000 at Hewlett
Packard and $320,000 at Sun Microsystems.
According to Redherring.com, a number of large outsourcing
clients complain that traditional firms such as IBM have retained
inefficient delivery methods, despite numerous opportunities to
standardize and save money. Some, like General Motors, have
threatened to take the initiative and break up their large contracts
into smaller, more manageable pieces rather than make available
the large multibillion-dollar, soup-to-nuts contracts that have
become the staple of the industry.
The job cuts in Western Europe target a slower-growing
market, where IBMs first-quarter sales increased by
only 2 percent, but also an area where wages are among the highest.
IBM, notes Le Monde, is eliminating jobs in countries
where salary costs are high, whether it be Germany, France or
the UK ... in order to add them in others where they are lower,
such as Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic.
See Also:
IBM profit warning
gives the market a jolt
[11 April 2002]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |