0
0

Bakersfield Californian eliminates 12.5% of staff due to 'decline in real estate advertising revenue'


 invite response                
2007 Jun 27, 10:30am   9,391 views  48 comments

by HARM   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

Source

"A steep but cyclical decline in real estate advertising has forced The Bakersfield Californian to eliminate 40 positions, 10 of them through layoffs, company President and CEO Richard Beene announced Tuesday.

The layoffs include four newsroom positions and will involve closing the newspaper's one-man Sacramento bureau."

Hmmm... let's see. The Bakersfield Californian just laid off 12.5% of it's staff due to lost RE ad revenue alone (though it is still running lots of RE ads, just not as many as before). So... basically, this means that during the bubble, an even larger % of their total payroll was directly tied to RE revenue --perhaps 25%, 35%, 50%?? Who knows?

Any possibility of that great a share of your revenue, uh, "influencing" your journalistic bias or editorial policy?

Naaah --that's just crazy conspiracy talk!

Discuss, enjoy...
HARM

#housing

« First        Comments 46 - 48 of 48        Search these comments

46   FormerAptBroker   2007 Jun 29, 12:25am  

Even more problems for Bakersfield's "King of Bling":

http://www.bakersfield.com/hourly_news/story/176832.html

47   PermaRenter   2007 Jun 29, 12:52am  

http://www.bis.org/publ/arpdf/ar2007e.htm

BIS warns of Great Depression dangers from credit spree
The Bank for International Settlements, the world's most prestigious financial body, has warned that years of loose monetary policy has fuelled a dangerous credit bubble, leaving the global economy more vulnerable to another 1930s-style slump than generally understood.
...
In a thinly-veiled rebuke to the US Federal Reserve, the BIS said central banks were starting to doubt the wisdom of letting asset bubbles build up on the assumption that they could safely be "cleaned up" afterwards - which was more or less the strategy pursued by former Fed chief Alan Greenspan after the dotcom bust.

It said this approach had failed in the US in 1930 and in Japan in 1991 because excess debt and investment built up in the boom years had suffocating effects.

While cutting interest rates in such a crisis may help, it has the effect of transferring wealth from creditors to debtors and "sowing the seeds for more serious problems further ahead."

The world waits to see what Ben Bernanke will do to "clean up" after Alan Greenspan.

48   Patrick   2007 Jun 29, 7:59am  

Mass delete of spam underway. Please let me know if there is an unusual amount of weirdness...

Patrick

« First        Comments 46 - 48 of 48        Search these comments

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   random   suggestions   gaiste