Showing posts with label layoffs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label layoffs. Show all posts

Saturday, September 14, 2019

Businesses Quietly Laying Off Workers Ahead of Anticipated Recession

Don't be fooled by the small numbers because many of them are layoffs at corporate headquarters.
Here's a list of the latest layoffs:

This was just a partial list from the first page of a Google search using the key words "lays off"

Monday, March 04, 2019

Job losses in 2019

Money just posted the article The Retail Apocalypse Is Heating Up in 2019. Here Are the Major Stores Currently on Deathwatch. The list is getting long and some of the stores are already gone, but I thought I would do a little research into how many jobs will be gone after all is said and done:


The trouble I'm having is discovering precisely how many total jobs are at stake. Fit Small Business explains "Top 10 Retail Analytics Every Store Needs to Measure." Number 10 is the Payroll Percentage, It says that "Businesses with low margins have to spend less on payroll," but following this advice may have had dire consequences according to Forbes which posted an article on 12/16/2017 complaining that "Too Few Retail Workers On The Floor, Too Few Retail Sales And Profits On P&L Statement"

Businesses couldn't lower wages, so what other choice did they have? Cutting hours for part-time workers, cutting store hours to peak traffic times only, or layoffs.


Unfortunately nobody seems to be able to think outside the balance sheet to the larger economy and consider that all these retail employees losing their jobs might have been good customers if they were paid enough to have disposable income.

XIIID Research explains the shift of service infrastructure from a middle class into a form of poverty class. But the worst is yet to come, according to Michael Hudson we are currently in an "Extraction Economy" which is permanently siphoning money from the Working Class into the pockets of the Financial Class.


Tuesday, September 15, 2015

INVENTORY FULL


According to many of the stories collected here, things aren't selling so well. I finally had to stop collecting. There were even layoffs in Canada.

Many of the stories list "market conditions" as the primary reason for their cutbacks.

Newspapers are facing a more permanent evolution as they lose their readers to death by natural causes from old age, and migration to the Internet.

The price of cut lumber is dropping due to a surplus of construction materials. This indicates a potential slow-down in construction.

Even QVC is cutting workers at a distribution center in Pennsylvania, which may be an economic indicator of what's going in within the distribution range of that center.

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