A few days ago, my old classmate called me ** and said that their company was going to lay off employees.
As soon as I heard it, it was incredible. They are typical state-owned enterprises, with high welfare and old-age security, and they have always been the "super iron bowl" in the iron rice bowl. This can't hold up, and ordinary private enterprises can still refer to it.
After chatting, I realized that the general environment was too bad. Policies have been tightened repeatedly, the industry has entered a harsh winter period, and its performance has plummeted. The boss also used the analogy of the student's report card at the meeting: 60 points to pass, 90 points to excellent, and now there is only a bloody 38 points left on the company's report card. With such a poor score, can it be optimized without layoffs?
As soon as I heard it, this is 38 points, optimize a ghost, it's clear that you want to live or die, you didn't force the count in your own heart?
01 The emperor who talks on paper, but it is the people who are really laid off.
In fact, in the past two years, anyone with eyes can see that all walks of life are going down all the way, and there are not a few people who are anxious. But at this point, it is indeed a little unprepared.
Let's take the real estate industry as an example, isn't this worse than rotten, so bad that state-owned enterprises will lay off employees!
Since last year, the policy has been smashed down like a mudslide, first three red lines, then a demand-side purchase restriction, and finally a direct suspension of loans and sales. For a time, real estate companies had nowhere to hide, a large number of projects were forced to stop, and the number of unfinished buildings surged.
But in my opinion, the worst thing is not the real estate companies, but the people who can't afford to buy houses and can't pay their mortgages!
Housing prices have skyrocketed in the past two years, and many people have dreamed of buying a house and are desperate to prop themselves in. Now that the policy has turned around, many people are holding just an unfinished building that can't be handed over and is within reach
So I'm very disgusted by some opinions on the current ** market, saying that this wave is a good thing, a "subprime mortgage crisis", driving those speculators out of the market, and allowing ordinary buyers to return. Isn't that?When the subprime mortgage crisis broke out, you were still a normal fart.
Because when it really comes to that point, the unlucky ones may be real estate companies, but the worst ones will always be us at the bottom!
02 fell into the well and took advantage of the danger of others.
In fact, this wave of regulation is indeed a last resort. People's livelihood is important, if we don't rein in the overheated industry of real estate, I can't tell if inflation comes one day, and our people's money is really worthless.
But I also feel that now that state-owned enterprises have started the mode of squatting and layoffs, this is inevitably too hard to brake, right?
Just like my old classmates and their company, the performance was still thriving in the first two years, but the recent wave of tightening has directly brought the unit to a state of survival. **I also talked about the iron rice bowl, thank God for being able to keep the rice bowl!
What's more, there has recently been a policy saying that it is necessary to clean up and inspect the informatization upgrading of state-owned enterprises and the construction of the "two new". This is not obvious, it is to fall into the well, take people.
The unit is still laying off employees, so let's wait until it is firmly established. Now that the car is about to be overturned by you, you can't wait for it to run a few more laps, is that appropriate?
Of course, this is not difficult to understand. After all, the task of reforming state-owned enterprises is heavy, and the directors of all walks of life are also looking forward to the early progress of their political achievements. But this reform is to come step by step, you are too urgent, state-owned enterprises can't bear it, is it true that the people want to bear the economic crisis again?
03 Internal and external troubles, full of contradictions.
In fact, in the past, state-owned enterprises of this level would not be crumbling when they were touched by the policy. After all, the volume is too big, and I still have the capital to survive.
But now that it is difficult at home and abroad, such a big living behemoth really can't hold on.
For example, my old classmates, the company has suffered serious losses in the past two years, so the above will no longer subsidize it, and they will find their own way. The boss found an investor, and he had already negotiated the matter of investing in shares and injecting capital, but he didn't think that the investor would regret it temporarily, and ran away directly with the company's data. Well, the operating funds are suddenly insufficient, and the company's survival is in question.
Not only that, but the employees in the unit also continue to strike**. Everyone has seen countless colleagues being laid off, and they don't know the bottom of their hearts, if the company continues like this, they will lose their jobs.
Therefore, anyway, state-owned enterprises have been accustomed to many disasters over the years, and they have long Xi accumulated the temperament of "many employees and difficult to control". If the pressure from above is too great, it will dare to strike;If the system is stiff, it dares to call for a salary increase;If you don't give money, it dares to stop working. This.
I look at this state-owned enterprise, internal and external troubles are a basket, too many contradictions erupt at once, it is really not surprising that it can't bear it.