Yahoo – AFP,
Mike Smith, December 14, 2017
Jerusalem (AFP) - Israeli pharmaceutical giant Teva announced Thursday it plans 14,000 job cuts globally over two years as the ailing firm unveiled sweeping restructuring plans while facing low prices for generic drugs and heavy debt.
Jerusalem (AFP) - Israeli pharmaceutical giant Teva announced Thursday it plans 14,000 job cuts globally over two years as the ailing firm unveiled sweeping restructuring plans while facing low prices for generic drugs and heavy debt.
Teva
Pharmaceutical Industries, the world's largest producer of generic drugs, said
its reductions would be across-the-board and in all its locations.
Its job
cuts would amount to more than one quarter of Teva's global workforce of over
55,000.
Closures or
divestments of manufacturing plants were planned for the United States, Europe,
Israel and elsewhere.
"There's
not any function where we don't have a reduction," Kare Schultz, who took
over as Teva president and chief executive in November, said during a
conference call to discuss the restructuring.
"Geographically,
it's everywhere. So it's a very broad set of actions we're taking."
Teva also
said it was suspending dividends on ordinary shares and its annual bonus for
2017 will not be paid "due to the fact that the company's financial
results are significantly below our original guidance for the year."
Teva has
been saddled with debt after its $40 billion acquisition of the generics arm of
rival Allergan was completed last year.
The
acquisition has been accompanied by low prices for generics, particularly in
the United States, a major market.
Teva
expects to save $3 billion by the end of 2019 with the two-year restructuring
plan.
There has
been deep concern over job cuts in Israel, where the company employs some 7,000
people and receives generous tax breaks.
On
Wednesday, Israel's powerful Histadrut trade union confederation called a
nationwide strike for Sunday following reports of the job cuts.
Teva
factory workers on Thursday walked off the job and protested, including by
blocking roads.
'Pay the
price'
According
to Histadrut head Avi Nissenkorn, some 1,750 workers will be laid off in
Israel.
Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office said in a statement he had spoken with
Schultz and asked that Teva do what it could to diminish the damage to
employees in Israel.
Netanyahu
also told Schultz he must do whatever possible to retain Teva's identity as an
Israeli company, and Schultz said he would, a statement from Netanyahu's office
read.
According
to Nissenkorn, Teva has received $6.2 billion in tax reductions since 2006.
"I
think their plan is exaggerated," he said.
"The number
of workers set to be sent home should be reduced, and not less importantly, all
the factories in Israel should be saved."
Teva has
faced a convergence of factors that have put it in difficulty.
Beyond low
prices for generics in the United States, its multiple sclerosis drug Copaxone
is facing competition after US regulators approved a generic version of it.
While Teva
has focused on generics, it also produces speciality drugs.
Its
restructuring will include evaluating products to determine whether they should
be discontinued, the firm said.
Schultz,
who is Danish, has sought to turn around the fortunes of a company that in the
past represented more than one percent of Israel's gross domestic product.
In late
November, the company announced a new organisational and leadership structure,
including combining its speciality and generics commercial businesses into one.
But the
cutbacks have led to strong criticism in Israel.
"Teva
is giving us a painful lesson in ingratitude and rudeness," Israeli Labour
party lawmaker Itzik Shmuli said.
"After
having benefited from billions in tax breaks, they are laying off. The crisis
is real, and it is mostly due to mindless management. Now they want
workers to pay the price."
No comments:
Post a Comment