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Companies Announce Tens of Thousands of Layoffs

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Government lockdowns causing long-term economic damage
Tens of thousands of people will get pink slips in the coming weeks as the long-term economic damage caused by government lockdowns in response to the coronavirus pandemic begin to ripple through the economy. Disney announced it will lay off 28,000 employees. US airlines are poised to let up to 50,000 workers go. Allstate plans to cut around 3,000 jobs. Royal Dutch Shell will eliminate around 9,000 jobs globally. German auto-parts supplier Continental AG announced it will cut or shift some 30,000 jobs worldwide. Halliburton plans to eliminate an entire layer of management. Marathon Oil is set to launch round two of job cuts, shedding another 2,000 jobs. And Goldman Sachs said it will cut its workforce by about 400 jobs. Meanwhile, politicians and pundits continue to fantasize about a quick economic recovery. The looming job cuts in the airline industry tell the tale. Government stimulus checks and loans kept the airlines limping along but the gravy train is running out. People aren’t traveling. Debts are piling up. Airlines were barred from laying off employees under terms of its March stimulus package. But economic reality has caught up. Bleeding red-ink, the airlines simply can’t afford to keep thousand on their payrolls. According to a Forbes article, “As the next staggeringly sad chapter of US airlines’ Covid-19 saga begins to unfold it’s becoming increasingly likely that at least one, and perhaps three or more will be forced into bankruptcy or, alternatively, into financially and strategically dubious mergers just to stay alive.” In the second quarter alone, US airlines combined lost $13 billion on a GAAP (Generally Accepted Accounting Principles) basis and blew through $15 billion in cash reserves. Q3 will likely produce similar numbers. Airlines have already shed tens of thousands of jobs by coaxing employees into early retirement or enticing them to voluntary quit.

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