
Downsizing
Downsizing is the permanent reduction of a company's labor force through the elimination of unproductive workers or divisions. Because severe long-term consequences can outweigh any short-term gains, many companies are wary of downsizing, and often take a gentler approach, by cutting work hours, instituting unpaid vacation days, or offering employees incentives to take early retirement. After announcing in April 2020 that it would eliminate 10% of its worldwide workforce of 160,000 — reportedly through voluntary layoffs, natural turnover, and involuntary layoffs — Boeing eliminated more than 12,000 U.S. jobs, including 6,770 involuntary layoffs, in May 2020. In the wake of the 2020 economic crisis and lockdown, many companies downsized their workforces due to the economic impact of government-ordered business shutdowns that were intended to slow the spread of the virus. Downsizing is the permanent reduction of a company's labor force through the elimination of unproductive workers or divisions.

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What Is Downsizing?
Downsizing is the permanent reduction of a company's labor force through the elimination of unproductive workers or divisions. Downsizing is a common organizational practice, usually associated with economic downturns and failing businesses. Cutting jobs is the fastest way to cut costs, and downsizing an entire store, branch or division also frees assets for sale during corporate reorganizations.



Understanding Downsizing
Downsizing is not always involuntary. It is also used at other stages of the business cycle to create leaner, more efficient businesses. Eliminating any part of an organizational structure that is not directly adding any value to the final product is a production and management philosophy known as lean enterprise.
According to the production principles of lean enterprise, any component of a business enterprise that fails to directly benefit a final product is superfluous. What is valuable (and conversely, what is not valuable) is determined by the customer based on the amount they are willing to pay for a good or service.
Downsizing can also be carried out to align the firm's skill and talent with the broader market. For example, a company may pursue downsizing to weed out employees with obsolete skills that may not be useful in its future direction.
Consequences of Downsizing
However, there is evidence that downsizing can have adverse long-term consequences that some companies never recover from. Downsizing may actually increase the likelihood of bankruptcy by reducing productivity, customer satisfaction, and morale. Firms that have downsized are much more likely to declare bankruptcy in the future, irrespective of their financial health.
Losing employees with valuable institutional knowledge can reduce innovation. Remaining employees may struggle to manage increased workloads and stress, leaving little time to learn new skills — which can negate any theoretical gain in productivity. Losing trust in management inevitably results in less engagement and loyalty.
Because severe long-term consequences can outweigh any short-term gains, many companies are wary of downsizing, and often take a gentler approach, by cutting work hours, instituting unpaid vacation days, or offering employees incentives to take early retirement. Some companies also offer employees the chance to retrain themselves by subsidizing part of their tuition costs. In some cases, they also rehire laid-off workers after revenues stabilize.
Example of Downsizing
In the wake of the 2020 economic crisis and lockdown, many companies downsized their workforces due to the economic impact of government-ordered business shutdowns that were intended to slow the spread of the virus.
The airline and hospitality industries were particularly impacted, as people were confined to their homes and discretionary travel was all but halted for several months. After announcing in April 2020 that it would eliminate 10% of its worldwide workforce of 160,000 — reportedly through voluntary layoffs, natural turnover, and involuntary layoffs — Boeing eliminated more than 12,000 U.S. jobs, including 6,770 involuntary layoffs, in May 2020. Boeing also announced that it had plans to layoff several thousand more employees, although it did not disclose when this would occur.
Boeing is one of the largest American plane makers, but it has been forced to restructure in the face of the 2020 economic crisis. In addition to the crisis, one of Boeing's jets — the 737 MAX — had been grounded in 2019 after a second fatal crash. In April 2020, the company recorded zero orders for the second time in 2020, and customers canceled another 108 orders for the 737 MAX. These two factors compounded created its worst start to a year since 1962.
Related terms:
Attrition
Attrition is the gradual but deliberate reduction in staff as employees retire or resign and are not replaced. read more
Bankruptcy
Bankruptcy is a legal proceeding for people or businesses that are unable to repay their outstanding debts. read more
Business Process Redesign (BPR)
A business process redesign is an overhaul of a company's central business processes to effect substantial changes. read more
Cost Cutting
Cost cutting describes measures implemented by a company to reduce its expenses and improve profitability. read more
Depression
An economic depression is a steep and sustained drop in economic activity featuring high unemployment and negative GDP growth. read more
Layoff
A layoff occurs when an employer suspends or terminates a worker, either temporarily or permanently, for business rather than performance reasons. read more
Lean Enterprise
Lean enterprise is a production and management philosophy that considers any part of the enterprise that does not add value to be superfluous. read more
Occupational Labor Mobility
Occupational labor mobility is a measure of the opportunities that workers have to change careers for gainful employment. read more
Organizational Structure
An organizational structure organizes a company’s activities. Explore four types of organizational structures: functional, divisional, flatarchy, and matrix. read more