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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America : US
Economy
Asian crisis hits US economy
Signs of recession in high tech, agriculture
By Martin McLaughlin
14 August 1998
The financial meltdown in Asia is having an increasing impact
in two key sectors of the US economy, computer products and agriculture,
according to figures published this week.
US Department of Agriculture cut its predictions for wheat,
cattle and hog prices and lowered its estimate for farmers' 1998
net cash income from $56.2 billion to $53.4 billion. The latter
figure would represent a staggering 12 percent decline over 1997,
meaning that US farmers were suffering income declines proportional
to those experienced by the people of Thailand, Indonesia and
South Korea.
Half of all American corn and soybean exports go to Asia, and
Japan is the biggest single purchaser of US crops. The economic
crisis which began with the devaluation of the Thai currency 13
months ago has slashed the purchasing power of Asian consumers
and hence the market for US farmers.
Largely as a result of the Asian events US wheat prices are
36 percent below the level of two years ago. Corn and soybean
prices are below the break-even level for farmers in the midwest
states.
In the southern states, meanwhile, the severe drought and heat
wave has destroyed much of the cotton crop. In Texas farmers have
abandoned 37 percent of the cotton fields. The USDA now predicts
an overall reduction of 24 percent in US cotton production, but
even the farmers whose crops survive will not benefit: higher
overseas production has kept cotton prices virtually unchanged
despite the US shortfall.
Because of the passage of legislation in 1996 phasing out the
system of price supports--the so-called Freedom to Farm Act--US
farmers have a much weaker government safety net. As a stopgap
measure, Congress rushed through legislation permitting the Department
of Agriculture to pay farmers in advance on the subsidies which
they are expected to receive in 1999.
Clinton signed the spending bill into law on August 12, but
the $5.5 billion advanced will be quickly exhausted--the sum is
slightly less than the USDA's projection of the decline in farm
income for this year alone. The main purpose of the bill is to
stave off any widespread bankruptcies or foreclosures until after
the November elections.
In the computer industry layoffs, plant closures and other
cutbacks related to lost markets in Asia are continuing.
- SyQuest cut 950 jobs at its Fremont, California plant, while
announcing other cuts at its plant in Penang, Malaysia. The company,
which makes removable disk drives, is seeking to cut overall
costs by 50 percents to stem huge losses.
- Adobe Systems, the largest maker of desktop graphics software
(Photoshop and Pagemaker), said it might report a third-quarter
loss and would cut its work force by up to 300, or 10 percent,
because of the slump in Asia and slower sales of Apple's Macintosh
computers.
- SGI announced 1,000 layoffs in the wake of its acquisition
of Cray Research. The company said it had tried to limit cost-cutting
measures to attrition, but "the attrition plan wasn't going
to get the costs down fast enough.''
- A Fort Collins, Colorado-based semiconductor company, Advanced
Energy Industries, said it was cutting 128 jobs, 14 percent of
its work force, because of "tough economic times in Asia
compounded by DRAM overcapacity and weak PC sales."
The executive placement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas,
which tabulates layoff announces by major American corporations,
said that US companies announced 50,774 job cuts in July, the
largest total for that month since 1993, with the electronics
industry leading the way with 10,349 cuts.
"Those who doubt the impact of the Asian financial crisis
on the economy need look no further than the semiconductor, computer
and electronics industries," said a company official. "Nearly
one out of every three jobs this year has come from the computer
and electronics sectors."
So far this year, 321,217 job cuts have been announced, 37
percent ahead of the same period in 1997, and more than the whole
of 1990, the first year of the last recession. Other layoffs announced
in the last few days include:
- W.H. Brady, a Milwaukee manufacturer of industrial products,
said it would cut 200 full-time jobs, about 7.4 percent of its
work force.
- H. B. Fuller, the biggest US manufacturer of industrial adhesives,
said it would cut 10 percent of its North American work force,
about 600 jobs, and close a quarter of its factories, in an effort
to save $30 million a year.
- Nabisco Holdings said it would close its Pittsburgh cracker
factory by November 20, eliminating 350 jobs.
- International Paper said it would cut 1,000 jobs and close
25 facilities as part of the completion of its acquisition of
the Zellerbach distribution unit of Mead Corporation, mainly
through the elimination of its own xpedx distribution system
which competes with Zellerbach.
- St. Laurent Paperboard is cutting 221 jobs at its mill in
West Point, Virginia, about a quarter of the work force, while
the women's apparel maker Halmode is cutting 75 jobs at a textile
factory in Covington, Virginia.
See Also:
Wall Street tumble: a warning of things
to come
[6 August 1998]
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