Seagate Fires 6,500, Or 14% of Workforce, Stock Soars (zerohedge.com) 224
turkeydance quotes a report from Zero Hedge: [Seagate] announced today an additional restructuring plan for continued consolidation of its global footprint across Asia, EMEA and the Americas. The plan includes reducing the Company's global headcount by approximately 6,500 employees, or 14% of its global headcount by the end of fiscal year 2017. The total pretax charges for the plan will be approximately $164 million in fiscal year 2017. The restructuring activities and global footprint consolidation underway should enable the Company to be operating within its targeted Non-GAAP product gross margin range of 27-32% by the December 2016 quarter. "Computer-memory specialist Seagate announced that its Q4 revenue would be $2.65 billion, beating expectations of $2.34 billion, and up from the $2.3 billion guidance given previously," reports Zero Hedge. "The company also reported gross margin of 25% and non-GAAP gross margin of approximately 25.8% for the fiscal fourth quarter 2016, up from the previous 23% forecast. Good news, and the stock is up 12% after hours as a result."
Lay them all off! (Score:5, Funny)
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Don't give them ideas. [debate.org]
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Re:Lay them all off! (Score:5, Funny)
110% = 25% (mon-thur) + 10% (fri)
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Shockingly accurate, I like it.
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Obstetrician 1: Get the EEG, the BP monitor, and the AVV.
Obstetrician 2: And get the machine that goes 'ping!'.
Obstetrician 1: And get the most expensive machine - in case the Administrator comes.
Patient: What do I do?
Obstetrician: Nothing, dear, you're not qualified.
Hospital Administrator: Ah, I see you have the machine that goes 'ping!'. This is my favourite. You see, we lease this back from the company we sold it to - that way it comes under the monthly current budget and not the capital account.
[The doc
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By George, I think you've got it.
Re:Lay them all off! (Score:4, Interesting)
I worked for a company that did this - stock took a 50% bounce up.
The market doesn't appreciate employees - employees are an expense, the market cares about results and seems to think that an empty building is more likely to get profitable results than one filled with people working toward a purpose.
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I worked for a company that did this - stock took a 50% bounce up.
The market doesn't appreciate employees - employees are an expense, the market cares about results and seems to think that an empty building is more likely to get profitable results than one filled with people working toward a purpose.
If empty buildings is what the market cares about, then the "market" gets what it deserves in the end.
One would think we learned a financial lesson from the dot-bomb era of vaporware-infused business ideas.
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I worked for a company that did this - stock took a 50% bounce up.
The market doesn't appreciate employees - employees are an expense, the market cares about results and seems to think that an empty building is more likely to get profitable results than one filled with people working toward a purpose.
If empty buildings is what the market cares about, then the "market" gets what it deserves in the end.
One would think we learned a financial lesson from the dot-bomb era of vaporware-infused business ideas.
I'd like to think that the market gets what it deserves, but since banks quit paying interest, the only way to keep your cash savings "current" with inflation is to invest them in the market, and the market is driven by a bunch of dumb statistics like P/E ratio, etc. Having every single person in the world investigate their investment options is neither efficient, nor a good use of resources (time), and yet, the persons who stand up and say they'll do that for you (fund managers) just look at dumb statisti
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From my experience, the empty buildings stay empty because it is trivially easy to offshore virtually everything. IT? Just call Tata or Infosys, and they can fix anything. For people that have to be present, it is trivially easy to hire H-1Bs, and because H-1Bs are minorities, it helps immensely with contract bids when it comes to affirmative action true-ups. Plus, there are no payroll taxes on H-1Bs either.
Of course, if H-1Bs dry up, you can rotate workers on tourist visas (B1/B2) who come to the US to "train", but who actually do office work for 90-120 days before rotated back out.
Those empty buildings can remain empty... the jobs don't ever come back... they just move offshore to cheaper areas.
Ironically, your "jobs don't ever come back" statement is embedded in your other statements describing the very loopholes that need to be closed in order to ensure the jobs DO come back.
Abusing loopholes is hardly a real solution. It only remains a viable option because loopholes keep getting overlooked due to palm-greasing.
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Well I, for one, don't want 50% of the hard drive cost to be covering the wage of idlers sitting around the office doing nothing. If you don't need them, why are you paying them? Scratch that; I'm the one buying the hard disk, so why am *I* paying them?
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Some hopefully would have been working on new models so not vital to production any time time in the next few months. Maintaining stuff - probably won't need those guys this week. With zero plans for the future it's amazing how many people seagull managers can do without so long as they are quick packing their bags to leave for the next gig before it's suddenly found that all the people who used to deal with various problems that crop up have been fired.
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Seagate has its own manufactories too, doesn't it? They produce their own hard drives. Maybe they retooled and have better equipment that doesn't need as much babysitting.
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Some hopefully would have been working on new models so not vital to production any time time in the next few months. Maintaining stuff - probably won't need those guys this week. With zero plans for the future it's amazing how many people seagull managers can do without so long as they are quick packing their bags to leave for the next gig before it's suddenly found that all the people who used to deal with various problems that crop up have been fired.
Sometimes it's not management's fault.
The problem in this case is that spinning drives are losing ground to flash and are a declining business. The "Performance drives" part of the drive market is already losing money for pretty much everyone leaving only the bulk storage part of the market still making money. I suspect that over the next while, we will see fewer updates on the performance drives while the drive makers concentrate on the larger/slower "NAS" drives until at some point, there aren't enough
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Long term, it continued as before, but more slowly... long exponential decays down to about 10% of that bounce value, twice in the last 15 years a dramatic uptick (to ~20M market cap), but then the long exponential decay again.
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I had heard that Seagate had MTBF problems.
I didn't realize that meant "Mean Time Between Firings".
Good news! (Score:5, Insightful)
"Good news, and the stock is up 12% after hours as a result."
Well...good news except for the 6500 people you just fired. But as long as you got paid, that's all that matters, eh, Mr Investor?
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>engineering is considered a hindrance to "company progress."
sure, engineers kept pointing out that the hard drive sizes were being advertised incorrectly.
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Maybe your employer should offer the bottom 15% some training to improve their skills, rather than just discard them? Because, you know, they are human beings.
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You tell him that he needs to write better code, and here are some resources and classes he could take, and try to improve in the next six months.
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Been there. Actually tried to get fired from my six figure salary job as I am working on a start-up. But just being unpolitical was not enough to get fired :-(
Have enough assets to feed my family for two years, but being on the outside feels still very strange (just recently quit). I had been with the same company for almost 17 years, and pretty much my entire adult professional life.
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You should work on your reading skills ;)
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I didn't, had to quit.
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Because keeping employees on and never cutting them always works out in the end, just look at the union bakers that made Twinkies. Oh wait, that company went bankrupt and the recipes were bought by a company that automated 80+% of the process.
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You are assuming these people won't get better jobs. Every time I was fired / let go in tech, I always found a better gig. In this industry especially, such an event is likely to be a blessing in disguise for the worker. By knocking them out of their comfort zone they may very possibly end up in a situation they otherwise never would have.
Spinning rust had a great run . . . but we're already well into the era of storage on chips. A lot of these folks will upgrade their skill sets by making a move, even
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Spinning rust had a great run . . . but we're already well into the era of storage on chips.
Wait, what? While SSD tech is getting better, the advantages are in niche applications compared to the application for spinning rust, mostly because spinning rust can easily keep up with 95% of what is required from storage (playing movies, etc).
Due to the (last I checked) 4x cost factor of SSD storage, I do not expect spinning rust to be toppled from the #1 spot anytime soon. Other than some fairly narrow use-cases, most people won't notice the difference in performance between platters and SSD, and even t
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Next time, speak for yourself Mr. Tenth-Percenter.
Re: Good news! (Score:2)
If you live is Germany that would be the wrong anser. Sarah Wageknecht is a classy sassy politician here. Looks like the Red woman in Game of Thrones. She Always wears red. Because she is the leftiest, loonient communist in the Bundestag
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Looks like the Red woman in Game of Thrones.
With or without the necklace on ?
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"Let me take off my necklace..."
"NOoOoOoOoO!"
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Sahra. And she isn't the leftiest and most certainly not loony. Compare her to Inge Hoeger for example.
Re: Good news! (Score:5, Interesting)
That is because in Germany it is very expensive to fire your employees. In some cases, it is not possible at all.
Germany does a good job of protecting the workers and in many cases, protecting the companies from their own short shortsightedness.
At the end of the last recession, Germany was one of the few countries perfectly positioned to take advantage of the upturn in demand precisely because they were not allowed to kick out 50% of their work force. This meant that the trained workers were already in place to ramp up production.
While in other western countries, the most skilled workers, i.e. oldest and most expensive, were all on unemployment and could not get rehired since they wanted too much money.
I guess it is hippy thinking on my part. I believe that companies have a right to make money, sure. But, they should not have the right to do so at the expensive of society as a whole. Especially as society is what allows them to make money in the first place.
If everyone fucks everyone else all the time, then things wont tend to work out that well in the long run. IMHO anyhow.
Yeah right (Score:2)
FFS (Score:3, Informative)
"Computer-memory specialist Seagate..."
Try again:
"Computer storage specialist Seagate..."
Memory â Storage.
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"Computer-memory specialist Seagate..."
Try again:
"Computer storage specialist Seagate..."
Memory â Storage.
Pie â la Mode.
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The real question is... (Score:4, Interesting)
Did the Seagate stock price go up because of the layoff or that the S&P 500 broke records today?
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and we can replce people with H1B's as HR will (Score:3)
and we can replce people with H1B's as HR will say that people will not be happy to be rehired at a lower rate.
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You think Seagate still has American employees? Maybe 10.
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....better yet, outsource. If something goes wrong, the consultants are to blame (but you can take credit for successes). Salaried employees are a liability [marketplace.org] on the banksheets, them with their sick days and office space [imdb.com] and benefits. Can't be hired and fired easily, dead-weights on shareholder value, and since the 80's came along, the shareholder is LORD [marketplace.org] you tiny little worker man.
Number Crunchers Fired Too?? (Score:2)
Mama, Economy (Score:2)
"Fires"???? (Score:2)
I was once fired for reasons that were not my fault and it delayed my benefits by almost a month. Sucked, royally.
6500 new votes (Score:5, Insightful)
for your local nationalist party.
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The lines between liberal and conservative, democrat and republican have blurred significantly. It's all just a political circle-jerk now.
1 + 1 = youre fired (Score:2)
Firings seem to have little to do with profits in corporate america. Profits up? Youre fired!, Profits down? Gotta downsize! Profits neutral? We need to trim the fat!
I'm sure they have their reasons in the long run, but let it not be said that corporations behave rationally. You can't really, when profits is the goal.
I would
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What's odd is that they never notice where they can make the real cuts. Just look at the average CEO salary, if you get rid of that useless bozo, you can keep hundreds of people who're actually working!
Stock prices go up, money saved! (Score:5, Interesting)
Less customers to buy stuff though, because more and more and more and more people are either jobless or have less disposable income due to this bullshit and it keeps going on and it's starting to get bad.
I'm convinced we're on the tipping point, real close to it. The division between the rich and the poor is about to be truly exposed soon.
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Yes, we're really close to it. If you look over the shoulder, you can still see it.
We've long PASSED that tipping point. The economy IS exactly in the current slump it is because people cannot buy anything anymore. Our warehouses are full. We are stockpiling like crazy, but there isn't anyone left able to buy those things.
It's the same shit that happened in 1929, but apparently we're unwilling to learn from history.
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I'm desperately trying to let go of my materialism or at least reduce it. It's difficult but I'm getting there.
There's so many "bargains" so many 2 for 1s so many "must have new things" it's endless and maybe it's my imagination but since I've been an adult it's gotten worse, about 20 years, around the same length of time as the internet really.
A much bigger pool of "joneses" to compete with for a start, globalisation reducing the cost of producing goods (for other consequences) and of course the spreadin
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Yea. It's like people have forgotten Fordism in the quest to maximize shareholder value. Hell, I have disposable income and I don't spend money on bullshit.
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Re:Stock prices go up, money saved! (Score:5, Insightful)
You people are ridiculous. You have what unemployment levels in the USA - just 5%? So stop saying that more and more people are jobless!
Unemployment statistics don't tell you everything. You can have 5% unemployment with 40% of the nation working jobs that pay so badly they can't hardly live off the salary and have to take extra jobs only to find that this still isn't enough. That's the resentment driving Brexit, that's the resentment driving every single Nationalist nut-bag party in Europe and that's what's driving Donald Trump.
Brexit for example has been sold as a fix-all solution to all the problems that ail people in the 'rust belt' of Britain. If we just limit or eliminate immigration, if we just leave the EU and make one sided trade agreements with China and Russia, If we just leverage our 'special relationship' with the USA (which, incidentally, most Americans are blissfully unaware of) to get a better trade agreement with the USA than the EU ever will, if we can just become an off shore tax haven for Europe... if, if, if... then everything will be OK and a golden flood of high paying jobs will flood the disenfranchised working poor in the UK. The thing I am afraid of is that even if the UK economy booms after Brexit, even if the economic growth in the UK explodes, that this will not benefit the people that voted for Brexit. Manufacturing jobs will not return, cracking down on immigrants will not happen and if it does it will not cause a sharp increase in wages for the working poor accompanied with a return of manufacturing jobs to the UK. Successive British governments run by political parties whose leadership is made up of wealthy elites will not tackle the root of the problem with the creation of well paying jobs, no more cutbacks in education, more money spent on education (which will have to continue for the next 20 years before it shows effect), and that there will be no effort to fix the National Health Service (despite what it said on that bloody bus), etc., etc... When the working poor in the UK find in a few years that they have yet again been stuck with a bucket full of shit they'll be even more angry except now the EU can't be blamed for it anymore.
The same essentially goes for Trump and the economically disenfranchised in the USA. If Trump actually becomes president and even if he gets reelected I seriously doubt that he will do anything for the urban and rural poor in the USA who live on a pittance pay working two or three jobs and that even if Trump tries to do something he'll meet with ferocious resistance from the wealthy and privileged classes. The net result is that all those angry three job working urban and rural poor who are voting for Trump now out of anger will find themselves, in a few years, if he gets elected, being shafted even worse by the likes of the Koch brothers than they are today and they'll be way more pissed off. All this while the US economy is booming, unemployment is low, growth is high and the purchasing power of their salary just shrunk again. Oh, and NO, I do not think Hilary Clinton will do anything to fix the problems that ail the USA. I also think that Bernie Sanders, if he had been elected, would have earnestly tried to fix these problems but that he would have been defeated by the same wealthy and privileged classes that will defeat Trump in the unlikely event that he tries to do anything to benefit his disenfranchised electoral base.
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If we blockade China to bring manufacture jobs back to America, we'll lose critical infrastructure jobs. Logistics, retail, shipping... all the $3.50/hr labor we use in China becomes $7.25/hr labor in America, and we can't buy as much stuff. Half of those support jobs go away, because they scale directly to number of units moved and sold. It'd be 15-40 million jobs lost if we completely eliminated outsourced manufacture.
People talk about getting all these new jobs, but they don't think about where con
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I agree with your comments. The opulent minority needs to be controlled worldwide, they have too much power. In the US, it's almost like we need a new constitution to address this issue. There should be a mechanism in the constitution that starts limiting the protection of bill of rights for rich and privileged can do as they gain assets and become well-connected. I call this the "Reverse Animal Farm" constitution. This way there will be a burden associated with being too rich and powerful, and it will ince
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Unemployment statistics don't tell you everything. You can have 5% unemployment with 40% of the nation working jobs that pay so badly they can't hardly live off the salary and have to take extra jobs only to find that this still isn't enough.
US "Employed full time: Median usual weekly real earnings [stlouisfed.org] Wage and salary workers: 16 years and over" are at an all-time high.
Also US "Nonfarm Business Sector: Real Compensation Per Hour [stlouisfed.org]" is also at an all time high.
So in the US, unemployment rates are low by modern OEC
I wish Seagate well... (Score:2)
I use two computers regularly. I have two others that I employ occasionally, and am gradually being made the steward of quite a lot of others at work. I have another computer under construction. One of those boxes has a Seagate boot drive and a Seagate data drive. They have performed well.
I don't believe for one minute that Seagate's cuts will result in anything even close to the quality of those two drives I have not experienced the quality programs some have, and until this moment, I would have disput
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So who are you using then? Intel, AMD, Nvidia, Western Digital, Hitachi, Samsung...they've all had significant layoffs as part of cost cutting or restructuring. Your computers are going to suck if you just cross off names because they have layoffs.
Playing Devil's Advocate Here, But... (Score:2)
Seagate Fires 6,500, Or 14% of Workforce, Stock Soars
Of those laid off, how much of that was due to improved productivity?
What were the roles?
Were these engineers?
Or workers whose jobs could be automated?
Or how many of these were "dead weight" or in redundant functions?
Or where people blindly laid off due to getting paid more than a certain salary cap, regardless of function just to make the spreadsheets pretty? *** (I've seen this.)
Some layoffs are totally destructive. Others are completely justified. I've seen both types. The article doesn'
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Not so simple (Score:2)
Even when it's regarding a function it can be the road to disaster if done badly. For example power plants have had to spend millions due to not mak
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If the company can manage without the people it's laying off then why were the people hired in the first place? Seems to me like the managers who hired the extra people should be fired.
Can we call it a bubble yet? (Score:2)
So, can we call it a bubble yet? Can we call it a recession yet? Can we call it a crisis yet? 1 in 6 children in the USA will go hungry tonight. Is that a sign of a healthy economy?
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What does an economy have to do with kids, are they producing anything? Stupid labour laws...
Just think what they could have done! (Score:2)
They could have kicked out the C-Level suits, just imagine what this could have done to the stock!
never understood (Score:2)
Cutting employees is a sure sign of a company in trouble, so why does the stock go up? Even with the fixation on quarterly results it doesn't make much sense to me. Are these all investors hoping that they will find another idiot to offload the stock to before it crashes?
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Cutting employees is a sure sign of a company in trouble, so why does the stock go up?
Cutting employees doesn't always mean a company is in trouble. Suppose they improved their production process so they are able to be 30% more efficient. Increases in efficiency often mean that fewer people are needed in the process.
Even with the fixation on quarterly results it doesn't make much sense to me. Are these all investors hoping that they will find another idiot to offload the stock to before it crashes?
Unless they're paying dividends, then yes.
See this 20 year old Dilbert strip (Score:2)
This explains it perfectly.
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Before I bought a house in the favorable post-2008 market / housing crash I had thought of going to Central or South America an do IT work there, make a killing, and perhaps stay there. Im 100% spanish-english bilingual, you see.
Maybe it's time I sell / rent my house and do the south / central america thing anyway.
I've lost all faith in the US and in "Western Civilization." To the point where I"m almost ashamed of being American. That, from a 10-year veteran of the USAF.
I'm ashamed of what we've become.
Re:Seagate Fires 6500, Stock Soars (Score:4)
Are you sure there was more to be proud of a few decades ago? What happens around the world today is, basically, the result of the fuckups the west committed in the last century.
You sure the difference isn't just that you're better informed nowadays?
Also don't kid yourself. Central and South America, as the rest of the world, is densely populated with people. There's just as much to be ashamed of there as in the US or where I live.
The only difference will be that it's new bullshit which gets you another few years to get used to and then fed up with. So that might be worthwhile.
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While some very dubious stuff happened on Reagan's watch there were not actually many people involved in it - mainly because of how dubious it was. The chain of command was told to go fuck itself. A Senator from Nevada was doing an end run around the military to fund one of the guys we are now fighting in Afganistan, let alone someone as low on the totem pole as North selling classified anti-tank weapons to Hezbolla via Iran. A few rogues on th
Re: Seagate Fires 6500, Stock Soars (Score:2)
North korea is looking for experienced personnell.
And i know lots of old east german and soviet citizens who are pining for the good old days...not
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Well, in my personal experience GDR wasn't all that bad. A plural of anecdote is not data.
Re: Seagate Fires 6500, Stock Soars (Score:3)
Which is not how it was. The government assigned jobs only if you couldn't find one yourself. Changing jobs wasn't difficult at all if there were no previous problems with authorities.
Re: Seagate Fires 6500, Stock Soars (Score:4, Informative)
To clarify this: I can speak only for GDR, but AFAIK this was pretty similar in the USSR and other former socialist countries.
There was no social safety net at all. Instead there was a constitutionally guaranteed right to work. This right to work was not the same as the American right to work, but more like a right to a job and to a wage directly proportional to the qualification independent of age and sex. In additional to it, there was also, in fact, sort of a duty to have a job. This resulted in the government assigning jobs to people who wouldn't find one themselves. This is also why many factories weren't very productive - because they have employed people who didn't do much. That was a substitute to a social safety net that pays to the unemployed, so at least the people, who would otherwise be unemployed, were able/forced to do something.
On the other hand, people with a decent qualification usually applied for a job directly at the management of the so called public owned enterprises they wanted to work at instead of letting the government officials choose a job for them. They could also take a job that required less qualified people without any problem if they were in the mood for such a menial job (that was something similar to contemporary downshifting).
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I've been buying WD drives since Seagate drive quality has gone to shit.
They need to fire their management first.
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Their drives were shit in the 1990's and have only gotten worse. I wouldn't trust any seagate drive as a paperweight.
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Please try to be useful for once in your life and suck a bunch of cocks.
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How do you think he got the position?
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You are aware that you are posting spam on a webpage where a sizable portion of the regulars do have the means to start a DDoS, yes?
Just asking.
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well a few years back they had a member of the press try to hack DEFCON.
there are some things you don't do or YOU DIE.
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...gotta love capitalism.
If there were a system in place to help retrain these workers, get them new jobs, and importantly, help them retain their dignity, then this wouldn't have to be such a sad day. Capitalism is probably necessary, but not sufficient for a well functioning society.
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The problem is jobs come from consumer buying power, which is increased by consumers having more left over after buying things. If, for example, half the people making food go away but half the food does *not* go away, two things happen: half the money you were spending on food can be spent elsewhere; and the amount of money someone needs to live in the same standard-of-living as the food workers (before they were unemployed) is decreased.
100% of the cost displaced by bumping those workers out of their
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I'd vote for CEO and board, what kind of money do you think this could save!
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What do products have to do with stock prices? That's so last century.