Rediff Logo
Money
Line
Channels: Astrology | Broadband | Contests | E-cards | Money | Movies | Romance | Search | Women
Partner Channels: Auctions | Health | Home & Decor | IT Education | Jobs | Matrimonial | Travel
Line
Home > Money > PTI > Report
February 1, 2002 | 1540 IST
Feedback  
  Money Matters

 -  'Investment
 -  Business Headlines
 -  Corporate Headlines
 -  Business Special
 -  Columns
 -  IPO Center
 -  Message Boards
 -  Mutual Funds
 -  Personal Finance
 -  Stocks
 -  Tutorials
 -  Search rediff

    
      







 
 Search the Internet
         Tips
 Sites: Finance, Investment
E-Mail this report to a friend
Print this page Best Printed on  HP Laserjets

Slowdown forces 50% MNCs to cut staff

Half of the multinational corporations have laid-off staff and 46 per cent outsourced non-core functions to meet the current slowdown which are not short-term measures but long-term arrangements, a study has said.

"Companies are not taking knee-jerk actions to respond to current economic pressures. They are making strategic decisions -- keeping their research and development programmes intact, for example, while making long-term adjustments to the sizes of their work forces and outsourcing non-core functions," it said quoting Samuel A DiPiazza, Jr, global CEO of PricewaterhouseCoopers.

The fifth annual global CEO survey conducted by PricewaterhouseCoopers, which interviewed 1,161 company heads from Europe, Asia and the US who employ more than 5,000 people globally, was released on Thursday at the World Economic Forum annual meeting in New York.

The executives, however, believe that abundant opportunities remain over the long term despite the slowdown and uncertainties regarding the timing and strength of economic recovery.

On the threat of excluding the developing countries in the process of globalisation and increase in the gap between rich and poor nations, 47 per cent did not think it would have negative effects, but 33 per cent agreed that such effects were likely.

The survey found that 44 per cent of the CEOs believe that the anti-globalisation protest movement does not pose a genuine threat to business in the 21st century, but one-third of CEOs supported the argument.

ALSO READ:
The World Economic Forum: News & Views

Back to top
(c) Copyright 2000 PTI. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of PTI content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent.

Tell us what you think of this report

ADVERTISEMENT