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Scotland: "Silicon Glen" hit as Motorola sheds 26,000
jobs worldwide
By Steve James
17 April 2001
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The 26,000 job losses announced at the end of last year by
US-based Motorola Inc. gives an initial indication of the social
impact of both the US economic recession, and the general crisis
of overproduction in the telecommunications industry.
Around 147,000 workers depend on Motorola for their livelihood.
The company is at the forefront in many areas of communications
technologymobile phones, broadband connections and cable
modems, satellite communications, Internet telephony and interactive
digital video.
Since last December, Motorola has closed factories in Harvard,
Illinois, pulled out of Florida, closed operations in India, cut
750 jobs in Dublin, Ireland and reduced its workforce by 1,000
in Swindon, England. The company has also cut jobs at its mobile
phone plant at Flensburg, Germany. The latest episode in Motorola's
attempts to revive its profitability at the expense of its workforce
is the imminent decision to close, or radically curtail operations
at its mobile phone production plant at Livingston, Scotland.
The market for mobile phones is saturated, with a market of
450 million units last year drastically down from Motorola's prediction
of 575 million. Earlier this year Swedish owned competitor Ericsson
announced 11,000 job cuts, losing out, like Motorola to Finland's
Nokia in a stagnant market.
At the same time, world demand for semi-conductors, one of
the company's other core products, is such that according to Motorola
leading executives, the industry is experiencing its sharpest
downturn in history as a result of high component inventories
for most customers and lower consumer demand."
The company, whose share price has fallen more than 75 percent
over the past year, an eight-year low, is also reported to have
liquidity problems. Last Friday, the company announced that new
investment would be reduced from $4.1 billion to $1.4 billion
next year, to try and turn around last quarter operating losses
of $206 million. Last quarter revenue was down 11 percent to $7.75
billion, from $8.75 billion a year ago. According to statistics
on its own website, the annual rate of return on investment has
plummeted from 15.2 percent in 1999 to just 3.7 percent in the
first quarter of 2001. In the end, the company may be forced to
sell an entire division.
It was only three years ago, in 1998, when the semi-conductor
industry was last wracked by problems of over-production. Motorola
owns one of the most eloquent testaments to that periodthe
giant Hyundai chip assembly plant in Dunfermline, Scotland. At
the time, it was the largest single foreign direct investment
project in history, but it never opened. Hyundai stopped work
following the 1997 Asian financial crisis, and the slump in semi-conductor
sales that followed. Motorola took it over, and the plant remains
idle.
Motorola may also be damaged by the escalating tensions between
the US and China. The company is the largest mobile phone producer
in China, earning $4 billion in sales and having 18 R&D facilities
situated there. A plan to build an advanced semi-conductor plant
in Tianjin was delayed because of US export restrictions of advanced
technology to China.
News of the possible shutting down of the Livingston factory
has provoked a flurry of interventions from British political
leaders, attempting to delay the closure, or to encourage Motorola
to close another plant somewhere else in the world. Press speculation
focussed on the Flensburg plant in Germany as a likely candidate.
Prime Minister Tony Blair telephoned the head of Motorola, Chris
Galvin, reportedly to complain about the announcement's timingjust
weeks before the British general election. Scottish Enterprise
Minister Wendy Alexander was initially refused an interview with
any Motorola officials. Latterly, Alexander, and First Minister
Henry MacLeish were both in the US for the "Tartan Day"
jamboree, where the Scottish politicians clamoured for American
investment while celebrating Scottish nationalism.
Increasingly, however, the Scottish Executive is losing the
battle to attract hi-tech assembly operations. Last week, PC producer
Compaq announced its intention to cut 700 jobs at its Scottish
plant in Erskinethe work being redirected to lower waged
Poland. Doubts are also being raised about the viability of a
National Panasonic plant near East Kilbride, owned by troubled
Japanese company Matsushita Electric Industrial.
The Motorola crisis will not be resolved by the investment
perks being proffered by the Scottish Executive or the local investment
agencies around "Silicon Glen"the term for the
concentration of assembly operations built up over the last 30
years in the Scottish central belt. The scale of Motorola's difficulties
is such that no amount of investment special offers can overcome
its financial calamity or compete with the vastly lower wages,
which Motorola can exploit in other areas of the globe.
Instead the Scottish Executive and investment agencies are
arguing for Scotland to become the operational base for trans-European
operations, as is increasingly the case with the giant IBM plant
at Greenock, near Glasgow. They are also hoping to attract new
projects, which can better take advantage of the Scottish education
and research infrastructure. To what extent this will be successful
remains to be seen, but the Executive foresee a far lower proportion
of assembly work being carried.
According to Alexander, The Scottish economy needs to
move on and play in different ways. The traditional inward investment
that we have sought is no longer available to us because there
is always going to be somebody who is going to competitively undercut
us.
The Executive is acknowledging that many thousands of hi-tech
assembly workers will lose their jobs over the next period. At
present, "Silicon Glen" employs around 41,000, with
another 30,000 in ancillary industries.
The end of the bitter Thatcher legacy, in which Britain's regions
have been able to exploit the low wage and deregulated economy
she implemented to attract corporations anxious to enter the European
markets, will have dramatic social and political repercussions.
For two decades British capitalism has been able to offset the
collapse of traditional engineering industries by attracting high-tech
assembly operations. Investment policy has directed these to regions
such as Scotland, Wales, North and South West England, where local
officialdom has best organised itself to appeal directly to the
transnationals.
The imminent accession of several Eastern European countries
to the European Union, and their ongoing integration into the
European economy, creates a new cheap labour periphery. The British
regions can only compete through further driving down living standards,
or throwing their existing workforces onto the unemployment lines.
See Also:
US stock market slide: a turning
point in American and world politics
[20 March 2001]
Ericsson outsourcing deal
threatens 11,000 jobs worldwide
[1 February 2001]
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