Posted on 01/20/2003 12:53:01 PM PST by Willie Green
For education and discussion only. Not for commercial use.
Higher paid managers and executives are being discharged at a rate 24 percent higher than it was a year ago, according to figures from the outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas Inc.
This mirrors a similar trend that occurred during the last period of recession and jobless recovery, when higher paid workers saw discharges increase by 40 percent between 1989 and 1992, the company says.
In a fourth-quarter survey of 3,000 discharged workers, 41 percent of those seeking jobs earned more than $85,000 in their previous position. That's up from 33 percent a year earlier.
While the number of high-salaried job losers increased in 2002's fourth quarter, the percentage of lower-paid workers affected by job cuts fell. In that period, 22 percent of discharged workers earned less than $50,000 in their former positions. That marks a decline from a year earlier, when 34 percent of job losers were at the lower end of the salary spectrum.
The larger percentage of job seekers with higher salary expectations may be a leading factor for why it's taking longer to find a new job. In the fourth quarter, job searches grew to their longest in the 17 years that Challenger has tracked such information.
It took an average of 3.9 months for job seekers to find employment in the fourth quarter, up from 3.4 months a year before. It took unemployed workers surveyed by Challenger in the fourth quarter of 2000 just 2.5 months to find new jobs.
Further indication of the plight of high-paid executives comes from a special survey by Challenger of discharged executives earning more than $100,000 in their previous position. Among the executives finding jobs in the fourth quarter, the average job-search duration was 5 months.
Knowing the way most bureaucratic organizations, including corporations, work, I suspect the people being cut are moderately high level technical people, as well as other professional level "worker bees". Cut managers or their various support staffs? Not bloodly likely. Or worse they cut some competent lead technical person and replace her with a person with the appropriate educational bacground, but who has been a manager for 20 years. Then they'll wonder why the bridge falls down, or the return rate on the product goes through the roof.
In the 50's, lower level, mid level, and yes some senior level managers.. had to go through most of the lessor level jobs and actually prove their ability.. If they had it, the rose to the top.. There was great respect for managers as they were once where they worked.. Most middle class workers made more than their supervisors.. It was considered a "cushy" job for managers, MBA's were the bottom of the totem pole.. " Foremen" got 10% higher than the top rated worker, Middle managers maybe 30%, The plant Superintendant maybe a comfortable 300%.. All were happy??
Enter the college Elite "takeover'.. Degree = Income.. The corporations were induced by the Federal Government to drop their internal apprenticeships and internal promotions for outside schools to "certify" fitness to hire.. Ergo. Few internal promotions and a class destinction between "college trained" and internal "workers". No more was their respect but.. "friction".. MBA's and higher degrees are suddenly worth a multiple of workers wages. So now.. there a class of high earner$ and dead end earners.. :(.
So now, when the new "High Class, High Level" person gets his desk taken away.. There comes a flood of alligator tears.. I am a true compasionate conservative.. I would be willing to train them to properly to use a paint brush, a broom, a saw, a torch.. or any tool to support themselves and maybe they could work upward. And this is no joke..
As for the idea of managers being laid off... I haven't heard of that happening to any large extent. They almost always protect their own. I agree with the poster who suggests that most of these layoffs are techs.
Yes, American tech workers are being shut out of working in America while foreigners are being hired. See the 2002 data: http://h1b.info/
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