| Employee Downsizing |  | 
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 Case Details:
 
 Case Code : HROB016
 Case Length : 09 Pages
 Period : 1990 - 2001
 Pub Date : 2001
 Teaching Note : Available
 Organization : Varied
 Industry : Varied
 Countries : USA, India, etc...
 
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 This case study was compiled from published sources, and is intended to be used as a basis for class discussion. It is not intended to illustrate either effective or ineffective handling of a management situation. Nor is it a primary information source.
 
 
 
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 << Previous The Downsizing Phenomenon Worldwide
	
		| 
Downsizing as a management tool was first introduced in the US during the 
mid-20th century. It refers to the process of reducing the number of employees 
on the operating payroll by way of terminations, retirements or spin-offs.
 The process essentially involves the dismissal of a large portion of a company's 
workforce within a very short span of time.
 
 From the management's point of view, downsizing can be defined as 'a set of 
organizational activities undertaken by the management, designed to improve 
organizational efficiency, productivity, and/or competitiveness.
 |   
 |  
	This definition places downsizing in the category of management tools such 
	as reengineering and rightsizing. Downsizing is not the same as traditional 
	layoffs. In traditional layoffs, employees are asked to leave temporarily 
	and return when the market situation improves. 
	
		|  | But in downsizing, employees are asked to leave 
			permanently. Both strategies share one common feature: employees are 
			dismissed not for incompetence but because management decided to 
			reduce the overall work force. In late 1990s and early 2000s, 
			different organizations adopted different kinds of downsizing 
			techniques and strategies (Refer Table II).
 In the 1980s, downsizing was mostly resorted to by weak companies 
			facing high demand erosion for their products or facing severe 
			competition from other companies. Due to these factors, these 
			companies found it unviable to maintain a huge workforce and hence 
			downsized a large number of employees.
 |  Soon, downsizing came to be seen as a tool adopted by weak 
companies, and investors began selling stocks of such companies in anticipation 
of their decreased future profitability. However, by the 1990s, as even 
financially sound companies began downsizing, investors began considering the 
practice as a means to reduce costs, improve productivity and increase 
profitability.
 This new development went against conventional microeconomic theory, according 
to which a weak firm laid off workers in anticipation of a slump in demand, and 
a strong firm hired more workers to increase production anticipating an increase 
in demand...
 
 
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