HockeyDad
3 years ago
Accenture, a Dublin-headquartered management and technology consulting firm, on Thursday said it will cut 19,000 jobs over the next 18 months.

The cuts represent 2.5% of the company’s global 738,000 employees, of which approximately 40% are located in India.

“These actions are expected to impact roughly 2.5% or 19,000 of our current workforce, of which over half are non-billable corporate functions and include over 800 of our leaders across our markets and services. Nearly half of the 19,000 people will depart by the end of fiscal year 23," CFO KC McClure told analysts during the Thursday earnings call.
rfenst
3 years ago

Accenture, a Dublin-headquartered management and technology consulting firm, on Thursday said it will cut 19,000 jobs over the next 18 months.

The cuts represent 2.5% of the company’s global 738,000 employees, of which approximately 40% are located in India.

“These actions are expected to impact roughly 2.5% or 19,000 of our current workforce, of which over half are non-billable corporate functions and include over 800 of our leaders across our markets and services. Nearly half of the 19,000 people will depart by the end of fiscal year 23," CFO KC McClure told analysts during the Thursday earnings call.

HockeyDad wrote:


So basically, the world is having/going to have a recession?
DrMaddVibe
3 years ago

Their programming over the last three years has been atrocious.
Now I listen to several hours in a row. I only turn it off if I hear one of a few words.

Racism
Black and or Brown people
LGBT etc.
Trigger, Triggering
Disenfranchised
Substance Abuse Disorder
Trump
drag show story hour
racist cops
underserved
social unrest
mostly peaceful
safe and effective

Am sure I'm missing a few.

More Happy News on NPR:

🌐 NPR cancels 4 podcasts amid mass layoffs : NPR
npr.org
› 2023 › 03 › 23 › 1165559810 › npr-layoffs-cancels-podcasts-invisibilia-rough-translation
1 day ago - Through the layoffs of about 100 people and the elimination of dozens of vacant positions, NPR intends to cut back its workforce from approximately 1,200 to about 1,050 employees. The nonprofit network's layoffs represent its largest reduction in staff since the 2008 recession. "It's been emotional, I have to tell you that," said Pat O'Donnell, executive director of SAG-Aftra's Mid-Atlantic division.

🌐 NPR to Cut 100 Jobs - The Lancaster Patriot
thelancasterpatriot.com
› npr-to-cut-100-jobs
March 23, 2023 in National News 0 NPR building. (David King/Flickr) NPR, the Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit media organization, announced last month that it will lay off approximately 10% of its current workforce.

🌐 NPR Talent In Solidarity As Layoffs Due By Friday - Radio Ink
radioink.com
› home › news › headlines › npr talent in solidarity as layoffs due by friday
1 day ago - NPR announced 10% of staff would be cut by the week of March 20. With that week here, and almost over, many talent prepare for the worst.

8trackdisco wrote:





https://chicksonright.com/blog/2023/03/27/npr-lays-off-10-of-workforce-as-msm-rendered-obsolete-by-destroying-their-own-credibility/ [/i]
HockeyDad
3 years ago

So basically, the world is having/going to have a recession?

rfenst wrote:



No. Accenture is firing consultants but McDonalds and a Taco Bell are hiring. People need to learn to fry.

HockeyDad
3 years ago
https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2023/03/what-is-a-rolling-recession-economy-news/ 

(World Economic Forum!)


When is a recession not a recession?

If that feels like a trick question, the answer – when it is rolling – also feels a bit tricksy.

Traditionally, in the US, recessions are defined by the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) as “a significant decline in economic activity that is spread across the economy and that lasts more than a few months”.

The difficulties of defining recession

Other rules of thumb include two consecutive quarters of falling real gross domestic product, but the NBER definition gives some leeway, so although the economy might be contracting and it might not feel very good to consumers, they may stop short of applying the recession label.

The other difficulty with those definitions is that they rely on different areas of the economy all contracting at roughly the same time. In other circumstances, individual sectors might all decline, just not at exactly the same moment.

Add the layers of uncertainty that are shaping the prospects at the moment – supply chains, war, inflation - and you get a decidedly cloudy outlook that’s subject to change. Last year, the World Economic Forum’s Chief Economists Outlook flagged the risk of a 2023 recession, as inflation choked global growth. By the time they convened for the Forum’s Annual Meeting in January, the mood had improved, with glimmers of hope and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) nudging up its 2023 growth forecast.

So what is a rolling recession?

“A rolling recession … is in progress,” Sung Won Sohn, professor of finance and economics at Loyola Marymount University, announced in February.

The uncertainty and uneven nature of what’s happening, particularly in the US, has given rise to the term rolling recession. Whereas a standard recession hits all sectors at approximately the same time, a rolling recession means some industries are contracting as others expand.

Sector-by-sector data seems to confirm this, with the S&P Global US Sector Purchasing Managers’ Index - a gauge that tracks output across seven US sectors - showing a mixed picture.

Business activity increased in three out of seven sectors during February, the data shows. While this was the highest since October 2022, the picture is mixed with Consumer Services and Industrials returning to growth, while the Healthcare category saw a renewed decline.

Technology was the strongest sector, while Financials was the worst-performing.

What are the implications of a rolling recession?

Some areas of the economy remaining strong could head off an outright recession and help the job market stay buoyant. And all of that has implications for inflation, interest rates and the cost of money.

In the latest Chief Economists Outlook from the Forum, almost two-thirds of respondents said a global recession was likely in 2023, while a third of respondents said it was unlikely, showing how unclear the outlook is.

US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell told Congress this month that the US economy “slowed significantly last year” and the current data is mixed.

“Although consumer spending appears to be expanding at a solid pace this quarter, other recent indicators point to subdued growth of spending and production,” he said. “Activity in the housing sector continues to weaken, largely reflecting higher mortgage rates. Higher interest rates and slower output growth also appear to be weighing on business fixed investment.”

And data shows the labour market remains strong, with the US unemployment rate at its lowest level since 1969.

Economic data and reports will be key to determining any action the Federal Reserve takes, he said.

“We will continue to make our decisions meeting by meeting, taking into account the totality of incoming data and their implications for the outlook for economic activity and inflation,” Powell said.

All the more reason to watch the data as it rolls in.
Abrignac
3 years ago

Accenture, a Dublin-headquartered management and technology consulting firm, on Thursday said it will cut 19,000 jobs over the next 18 months.

The cuts represent 2.5% of the company’s global 738,000 employees, of which approximately 40% are located in India.

“These actions are expected to impact roughly 2.5% or 19,000 of our current workforce, of which over half are non-billable corporate functions and include over 800 of our leaders across our markets and services. Nearly half of the 19,000 people will depart by the end of fiscal year 23," CFO KC McClure told analysts during the Thursday earnings call.

HockeyDad wrote:



If you thought tech support sucked balls now just wait until the cuts kick in.
HockeyDad
3 years ago
Lucid Group, the U.S. automaker that produces the luxury all-electric Air sedan, is cutting its workforce by 18% as part of a restructuring, the company disclosed in a regulatory filing.

The layoffs, which will affect 1,300 employees, will be completed by the end of the second quarter. Lucid expects to incur about $24 million to $30 million in charges connected with its restructuring plan, namely due to severance payments, employee benefits and stock-based compensation. The layoffs will be across the organization and will include executive positions.
rfenst
3 years ago
The traditional view is/was that inflation and interest rates increase with higher employment and are reduced with layoffs being the trade-off.



Like I repeated before:

"It's a recession when you lose your job. It's a depression when I lose mine.
frankj1
3 years ago
I live very near uber wealthy communities and find it depressing that though I see several Maseratis and their ilk every day, I have yet to (knowingly) see a Lucid.
I'm thinking they may not be a harbinger of anything Economy and might just be a well funded yet floundering corporation.


I think Spey may have one though. I think he loves it.
deadeyedick
3 years ago

I live very near uber wealthy communities and find it depressing that though I see several Maseratis and their ilk every day, I have yet to (knowingly) see a Lucid.
I'm thinking they may not be a harbinger of anything Economy and might just be a well funded yet floundering corporation.


I think Spey may have one though. I think he loves it.

frankj1 wrote:



I have seen several in areas near me along with hundreds of Teslas. Course the Lucid are manufactured not far from Phoenix so they get more press coverage.
JGKAMIN
3 years ago
I see every expensive vehicle on a daily basis and have seen the demos on a showroom floor in an expensive shopping center. I have also never actually seen one being driven on the street by its owner.
DrMaddVibe
2 years ago
UPS to layoff nearly 12,000 employees across the globe to 'align resources for 2024'



UPS plans to layoff nearly 12,000 employees following a massive year-over-year decline in revenue, company officials told USA TODAY Tuesday morning.

The workforce reduction is part of an effort to align resources in 2024 and will save the company nearly $1 billion, the Atlanta-based company's CEO Carole Tomé said on a company earnings call.

“I want to thank UPSers for providing the best on-time performance of any carrier for the sixth year in a row,” Tomé said in a statement released by the company Tuesday. “2023 was a unique and difficult year and through it all we remained focused on controlling what we could control, stayed on strategy and strengthened our foundation for future growth.”

https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/2024/01/30/ups-layoffs-2024/72405535007/ 


And they just settled with their union to give them epic raises and bonuses. 🤔
HockeyDad
2 years ago
PayPal plans to cut its workforce by 9%, the San Jose-based tech giant announced Tuesday — almost exactly one year after a similarly sized layoff round.

CEO Alex Chriss announced the cuts in a Tuesday email to staff, now published on the company’s website. He called the decision “difficult but necessary,” and wrote that the reduction would include both layoffs and “the elimination of open roles” and would take place “over the course of the year.”
A company spokesperson told SFGATE on Tuesday that 311 San Jose-based employees are among the layoffs, but did not provide further details.

“We are doing this to right-size our business, allowing us to move with the speed needed to deliver for our customers and drive profitable growth,” wrote Chriss, who took over the CEO job in September, in his email. PayPal turned a $1 billion profit from July to September, the company reported in a November filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
PayPal counts Venmo and Xoom among its subsidiaries and had 29,900 total employees at the end of 2022, per a February 2023 filing. The financial payments giant laid off about 2,000 workers on Jan. 31, 2023, meaning the 9% cut announced Tuesday will likely eliminate around 2,500 jobs.
ZRX1200
2 years ago
Bidenomics is an opportunity to rehire back part timers and claim VICTORY!
rfenst
2 years ago
Near record unemployment rate at 3.7%
Inflation close to or within target range
Great GDP 3%+
Interest rates trend downward
Consumer sentiment significantly increased
...
...
...
...
...
....


frankj1
2 years ago

Near record unemployment rate at 3.7%
Inflation close to or within target range
Great GDP 3%+
Interest rates trend downward
Consumer sentiment significantly increased
...
...
...
...
...
....


rfenst wrote:


not if you care more about the election!
And God forbid that some kind of border policy gets done after a half century of using it as an election marketing ploy...if only it wasn't an election year, says Trump.
ZRX1200
2 years ago
Robert did you LOL when you typed that?
RayR
2 years ago

Near record unemployment rate at 3.7%
Inflation close to or within target range
Great GDP 3%+
Interest rates trend downward
Consumer sentiment significantly increased

rfenst wrote:



Only one problem with that propaganda. Peeps ain't feeling it.
I asked my wife. She asked her hairdresser today. Neither one feeling it.
frankj1
RayR
2 years ago
The other problem with inflation...corruption is booming in the United States and around the world..

I'm a fan of the work of the late great Henry Hazlitt (1894-1993), so this article intrigued me.

“During every great inflation there is a striking decline in both public and private morality,” - Henry Hazlitt


The (Other) Cost of Inflation: Inflation Erodes More Than the Value of Money, History Shows

Jon Miltimore
January 26, 2024

Across the world, people are struggling under the specter of inflation.

In Venezuela, the inflation rate is 360 percent. In Argentina, it’s 160 percent. In Turkey, inflation is about 50 percent, about 10 percent higher than its neighbor Iran.

In Europe, inflation of the euro has finally cooled to about 3 percent, down from more than 10 percent a year ago. Canada and the United States have witnessed a similar pattern.

Even if Europe and North American countries can continue to rein in inflation — and that’s a very big if — the consequences of governments’ inflationary policies have already been realized. The value of people’s earnings and savings has been severely (and likely permanently) eroded.

The depreciation of real income causes serious pain for consumers and families, particularly poorer families who spend a higher percentage of their income on food and housing, commodities that tend to be disproportionately impacted by inflation.

“Lower-income households experienced above-average inflation because of their higher proportional spending on food and housing, categories for which prices were rising more rapidly at the time (especially during 2020, with the onset of the pandemic),” a study by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York concluded earlier this year.

While the pernicious effects of inflation have been exhaustively detailed in recent years, one effect of inflation has received little attention: its impact on morality.

More...

https://www.aier.org/article/the-other-cost-of-inflation-inflation-erodes-more-than-the-value-of-money-history-shows/ 



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