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<text id=89TT2350>
<title>
Sep. 11, 1989: Where Did The Gung-Ho Go?
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
Sep. 11, 1989 The Lonely War:Drugs
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BUSINESS, Page 52
Special Report: Working Scared
Where Did the Gung-Ho Go?
</hdr><body>
<p>It has been eroded by fear and anxiety on the job as employees
endure an era of layoffs and turmoil
</p>
<p>By Janice Castro
</p>
<p> The back-to-work season has begun, but for millions of
Americans, the gung-ho is gone. A Chicago ad-agency executive
who lost his job in a corporate cutback last month bitterly
quips, "This may be a good thing to happen in August. It's a
good time to beat the Christmas rush." Another Chicago manager
says his boss told him he'd be laid off in a few weeks, then
warned him, "Don't slack off just because we've let you go."
Even a beer-company employee whose position seems secure and who
ought to be in a good mood on Labor Day is sad-hearted when he
thinks about work. "It's just a job now, just a job. It used to
be fun. When you made deliveries, you were `the Pabst man' or
`the Schlitz man,' and it made you proud," says Joe, who worked
his way up from truck driver to middle manager at a Milwaukee
brewery. "Now it's dog-eat-dog. The only things that anyone
cares about are volume and money."
</p>
<p> If many U.S. workers are not observing Labor Day this year
with any chest-thumping pride, it is because the dominant mood
in a lot of American companies is one of fear and anxiety. Loyal
corporate soldiers used to believe their employers would reward
good work with job security, full benefits and decent pay. Now
they have serious doubts about whether they can expect anything
beyond the next paycheck. Says Rudy Oswald, chief economist for
the AFL-CIO: "Workers have a right to be upset and angry.
They've been bought and sold and have seen their friends and
relations fired and laid off in large numbers. There is little
bond in many companies between employers and workers anymore."
</p>
<p> Why the change? In industry after industry, U.S. companies
have carried out drastic cost-cutting programs and massive
layoffs. Employers are struggling to cope with ferocious global
competition, unfriendly takeovers and unprecedented new levels
of corporate debt. Determined to slash labor costs, companies
have discarded traditional notions about job security,
compensation and seniority. Like drowning men shedding layers
of clothing, they have closed thousands of factories, moved
manufacturing operations overseas and eliminated entire levels
of management and lines of business.
</p>
<p> All that leanness and meanness has left companies more
profitable, but management experts fear that in the process,
businesses may have sown the seeds of a more enduring and
costly problem: company loyalty is dying. Even as American
business seeks to inculcate a new corporate credo of worker
participation and involvement, it is confronting a
shell-shocked, apathetic and risk-averse labor force. Some
business thinkers fear that the cost-cutting binge of the 1980s
may depress corporate creativity and competitiveness for years
to come. Says Madelyn Jennings, senior vice president of Gannett
Co.: "Employees are running so scared that there is a whole
culture that says don't make waves, don't take risks -- just at
the time when we need innovation."
</p>
<p> A TIME/CNN poll of 520 workers conducted last week by
Yankelovich Clancy Shulman shows a sharp decline in perceptions
of corporate loyalty on both sides of the manager's desk, as
well as an expectation of future job hopping. Among those
surveyed, 57% said companies are less loyal to employees today
than they were a decade ago, while 63% said workers were less
loyal to their firms. Asked whether they trust their employers
to keep their promises to workers, 48% said "only somewhat."
While 60% of the workers said they would prefer to stay in the
job they have now, 50% said they expected to change jobs within
the next five years.
</p>
<p> It is hardly surprising that workers are anxious. Since
1983, according to the Department of Commerce, 4.7 million
workers who had held their jobs for at least three years have
been dismissed. About a third took pay cuts of at least 20% in
their next position; a fourth have yet to find new jobs. While
the U.S. unemployment rate remains relatively low -- the
Government reported last week that the August figure was
unchanged at 5.2% -- the job market is racked by a constant
churning, along with a tumultuous shift from full-time jobs to
part-time and temporary labor. Says Bernard Brennan, chief
executive of Montgomery Ward: "Every time I go to a party, I get
several resumes from guests the next day. It's not always wise
to ask people what they do for a living anymore."
</p>
<p> Many employers, in fact, view an accordion-like staffing
policy as appropriate long-term strategy, hiring workers to meet
demand and shedding them just as quickly to trim costs. Even the
term downsizing is beginning to give way to "rightsizing," a
reference to the constantly shifting needs of employers. In the
past two months, five major corporations -- Chrysler, Kodak,
Campbell Soup, Sears and RJR Nabisco -- announced new cutbacks
totaling 13,000 jobs. Some companies have cut enough people from
their payrolls to populate a city. At General Motors alone,
150,000 jobs have been eliminated since 1980 (current U.S.
payroll: 431,000).
</p>
<p> At many firms the practice of laying off longtime workers
has taken on a harsh tone. Steve Snow, 36, went to work for
R.J. Reynolds right after college. The son of a tobacco farmer,
he worked as a Reynolds manager for 14 years. He was dismissed
last month, along with 1,640 other workers, as part of the
restructuring of the firm following its $25 billion leveraged
buyout by Kohlberg Kravis Roberts last November. Called into the
product manager's office and given the word, he recalls, "I went
numb. I could not say anything for a minute. I felt like I had
always done a good job and that this could not be happening to
me. They decided I could not go back into the working area. I
had left my dress shoes under my desk. They sent someone to get
them for me."
</p>
<p> Most frightening to many workers is the thought that they
may be jettisoned after 20 or 30 years at a company. People who
draw their sense of identity and self-esteem from the companies
for which they work often suffer a huge psychological blow when
they find out they are no longer of much value to the
enterprise. Says Gannett's Jennings: "I don't think we have any
idea of what we've done. There is a view that people are as
dispensable as Kleenex."
</p>
<p> The corporate campaign to unburden payrolls of highly
compensated workers has brought a wave of semivoluntary early
retirement. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the
percentage of workers retiring between the ages of 55 and 64
rose from 13.2% in 1960 to 32.7% in 1986. Since 1980 about
one-third of all U.S. firms have used early-retirement plans to
trim senior workers.
</p>
<p> Since pension and benefits payments are smaller for workers
who retire early, many youthful retirees must seek new jobs and
often settle for less pay. One Chicago-area sales manager,
forced to retire at 53, has held four jobs in the six years
since then. Says he: "You'd be amazed at the number of people
my age who were arbitrarily let go."
</p>
<p> Besides trimming workers, companies are cutting back on the
benefits they offer as a way of dealing with rising costs. A
study by Hewitt Associates, an Illinois-based
benefits-consulting firm, found that the percentage of large
U.S. firms paying the full cost of hospital room-and-board
charges for employees declined from 53% in 1984 to 29% in 1988.
While some progressive companies are offering new benefits to
help two-income couples cope with the stresses of raising
families, they are still in the minority. According to the
TIME/CNN poll, only 10% of the workers surveyed said their
companies offer day care, and just 20% offer family leave for
fathers. Sometimes the last cut is the deepest: a group of GM
retirees filed suit against the automaker in Los Angeles last
month on behalf of more than 80,000 retired GM workers,
claiming that the company cut their benefits and imposed new
co-payments and deductibles.
</p>
<p> The most disturbing trend of all is the rise of a new lower
class of workers. While American business has created 17
million jobs during the current 6 1/2-year economic boom, as
many as 3 million of those openings are temporary positions. And
though most temporary workers are employed full-time, they
generally labor without benefits or any sort of job security.
Once dominated by clerical workers, the temp ranks are now
swollen with thousands of engineers, designers, accountants,
marketing specialists and other skilled workers.
Massachusetts-based Digital Equipment, for example, employs
about 3,200 temporary workers on its manufacturing payroll of
32,000.
</p>
<p> In addition, company payrolls are now studded with a
variety of such categories as part-time, informal and contract
workers. Generally described as contingent workers, these
employees are often paid less than full-time, permanent
employees for the same work. Richard Belous, a vice president
of the National Planning Association, a Washington group that
studies workplace issues, estimates that as many as 36 million
Americans -- more than one-fourth of all U.S. workers -- are
contingent employees. The ranks of such workers are growing half
again as rapidly as total U.S. employment.
</p>
<p> Companies are just beginning to appreciate the damage that
these changes can do to morale and productivity. After massive
layoffs, for example, firms go through a period of grieving.
When employees are resentful over the loss of their colleagues,
work often grinds to a standstill for weeks. Anxiety runs high;
mistakes are made; deadlines are missed. Charles Munro, an
officer for E.F. Hutton in Chicago for 17 years, lost his job
at the failing company when his department was eliminated in
1987. Says he: "People see a company slowly disintegrating. They
keep their heads down and become part of the furniture."
</p>
<p> Resentment can flare when contingent employees work
alongside permanent ones, doing the same work. Full-time
staffers treat part-timers and temps as second-rate interlopers
whose presence threatens their own status. For their part,
contingent workers refer scornfully to permanent employees as
"tree huggers."
</p>
<p> Demographics have played a role in the decline of worker
morale. The baby-boom generation is both better educated and
60% larger than the one before it. Education spurs higher
expectations, yet the sheer size of the generation now
approaching its mid-40s ensures that millions of top-quality
workers will never find places near the apex of the corporate
pyramid. Donald Kanter, a Boston University professor of
marketing, and Philip Mirvis, a consultant, report the depth of
this growing worker pessimism in a new book, The Cynical
Americans (Jossey-Bass; $22.95). Many managers and
professionals, they note, "have become `free agents' in the
business world, selling their services to the highest bidder.
. . These cynics believe that only saps and suckers are loyal
to their companies today."
</p>
<p> In the lower echelons, the lack of corporate commitment to
longer-term workers may produce a less competitive work force,
economists believe. Most Japanese workers still enjoy job
security under a system that virtually guarantees lifetime
employment. While Japanese and European firms spend 4% to 6% of
expenses on training their workers, U.S. companies are investing
only about 1.5% of payroll costs on improving employee skills,
according to the American Society for Training and Development,
a Virginia-based research group.
</p>
<p> As global competitive pressures intensify, companies will
have to find ways to inspire new levels of commitment and
productivity. Some firms are making special efforts to rebuild
long-term relationships with their employees. PepsiCo now offers
a special stock-option plan to all its 100,000 full-time
employees, from senior managers to Frito-Lay truck drivers and
Taco Bell chefs. Says D. Wayne Calloway, PepsiCo's chairman: "If
they see that their hard work can make them wealthy, they might
be more inclined to stay." More companies are expected to
establish incentive-pay systems, which many employees prefer.
Such systems typically yield productivity increases of 15% to
35%, according to Edward Lawler, a professor of management at
the University of Southern California.
</p>
<p> Such efforts may pay especially big dividends for employers
in the coming years. Reason: a shrinking pool of workers. An
average of only 1.3 million people will enter the labor force
every year in the 1990s, down from 3 million during the 1970s.
Employers who have known only labor surpluses will soon be
bidding for the services of skilled workers.
</p>
<p> Other firms are seeking to restore the ties that bind in
more subtle ways. At Polaroid, to reinforce a sense of community
and corporate citizenship, teams of employees are put in charge
of deciding how the company's charitable contributions will be
distributed. The Pittsburgh-based Heinz company revived its
annual picnic this summer after a hiatus of several years.
Hard-pressed executives are beginning to learn that employees
need to be motivated by more than fear. Even in an era of tight
budgets, companies must figure out how to make their workers
feel like part of the team. If they do not, productivity is
likely to fall -- or another company will find a way.
</p>
<p>--Jerome Cramer/Washington, Joyce Leviton/Atlanta and William
McWhirter/Chicago
</p>
</body></article>
</text>