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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>