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- <text id=93TT1168>
- <title>
- Mar. 15, 1993: When Downsizing Becomes "Dumbsizing"
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 15, 1993 In the Name of God
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 55
- When Downsizing Becomes "Dumbsizing"
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The pink slips are still flying. But with the fat long gone,
- business is now cutting dangerously into muscle.
- </p>
- <p>By BERNARD BAUMOHL
- </p>
- <p> Rightsizing. Restructuring. Downsizing. The terms are cold
- and unemotional. Yet the euphemisms of the early 1990s all mean
- the same thing: layoffs. Over the past five years, corporate
- America has been driven by a single-minded mission to gut itself
- of "excess workers." It was supposed to be the fastest and
- easiest way to cut business costs, be more competitive and raise
- profits--or at least that's what many top executives thought.
- </p>
- <p> But there is mounting evidence that this slash-and-burn
- labor policy is backfiring. Studies now show that a number of
- companies that trimmed their work forces not only failed to see a
- rebound in earnings but found their ability to compete eroded
- even further. "What's happened shouldn't be called downsizing.
- It's dumbsizing," says Gerald Celente, director of the Trends
- Research Institute in Rhinebeck, New York. "All these firings
- are going to end up hurting our international competitiveness,
- not helping it."
- </p>
- <p> Whatever it is called, its effect on the American economy
- has been painful and profound. More than 6 million permanent
- pink slips have been handed out since 1987, and layoffs are
- occurring at an even faster pace this year than in 1992.
- Despite signs of a brisker economy, at least 87 large firms
- announced major job cuts in the first two months of 1993 alone.
- </p>
- <p> What is so troubling is that while companies do trim a
- bloated work force from time to time, many of the recent
- layoffs may not have been necessary. According to a new study
- by Wayne Cascio, a business professor at the University of
- Colorado, companies have too often assumed that if the
- competition was cutting costs by firing workers, then they had
- to follow suit. Compaq Computer, for example, announced last
- October that it was laying off 1,000 workers. Yet two weeks
- later, the company admitted that profits would double in 1992.
- Firms like General Electric and Campbell Soup continued to slash
- personnel even though they both just had highly profitable
- years. "There is tremendous peer pressure to get rid of
- workers," says A. Gary Shilling, an economic consultant.
- "Everybody's doing it because they think they have to."
- </p>
- <p> But the deeper problem facing some companies was an
- inability to respond adroitly to changing markets, and
- decimating their work forces may have made that task even
- tougher when the recovery finally rolled around. "Just look at
- what they've done to IBM and Sears," says Celente. "They've cut
- the heart out of these companies. They are blaming an
- overstaffed work force for bringing down profits. But that's
- not the real problem. These companies lost out competitively
- because they didn't change their products."
- </p>
- <p> One of the most obvious effects of downsizing is that the
- employees who survive are forced to work longer and harder. In
- February the manufacturing workweek stretched to 41.5 hours,
- the longest in 27 years. The resulting increase in stress leads
- to discontent, lowers creativity and undermines corporate
- loyalty. A study by the American Management Association last
- year showed that of more than 500 firms surveyed that had cut
- jobs since 1987, more than 75% reported that employee morale had
- collapsed. Indeed, two-thirds of the companies showed no
- increase in efficiency at all and less than half saw any
- improvement in profits.
- </p>
- <p> Not only was there often no payoff on the bottom line, but
- corporate chiefs who expected at least some applause from Wall
- Street for reducing labor costs also got a nasty shock. "Senior
- executives may think that a press release announcing layoffs
- sends a signal like, `Look, I'm cutting costs, therefore reward
- me,' " says Carol Coles, president of Mitchell & Co., a
- management consulting firm in Waltham, Massachusetts. "But
- investors are a lot savvier than that. They know that firms
- that had major layoffs often have more significant problems.
- Streamlining a company does not push stock prices higher."
- </p>
- <p> Coles studied 14 firms that announced major staff cuts
- during the 1980s and found that the rise in their stock prices
- lagged the overall market by 70% in the past three years. For
- example, Bethlehem Steel began laying off workers in 1986. Yet
- its stock has fallen 50%, in contrast to a rise of 48% by the
- S&P 500. Monsanto started cutting its work force in 1985, but
- its stock rose a slim 30%. Clearly these were troubled
- companies that would probably have suffered sluggish stock
- prices in any event, but the study indicates that cutting labor
- costs did not make Wall Street forgive their more deep-seated
- problems.
- </p>
- <p> "There is a reverential belief that during hard times, you
- can turn a company around, resuscitate its profitability and
- raise shareholder value by laying off workers," says Alexander
- Hiam, author of Closing the Quality Gap. "But that's a huge
- myth." For both individual companies and the economy as a
- whole, a true recovery may require dispelling that myth and
- focusing once again on real ways to increase performance and
- creativity.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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