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Dell Closes Ireland Plant; 2nd Largest Employer

Wide Angle writes in with a PBS report on tough economic news from Ireland: Dell announced that it will relocate its manufacturing plant in Limerick, Ireland to Lodz, Poland. "Dell's announcement... is a severe blow to the Irish economy, which has been hit hard and fast by the global economic crisis. Dell is Ireland's second-largest corporate employer and the country's largest exporter. Nineteen hundred shift workers will lose their jobs. ...Dell's closing is not a result of the economic downturn, but of a pattern all too familiar in the United States — corporations' perennial search for cheaper labor. Since 2000 several companies, such as Procter & Gamble, Intel, Gateway, and NEC Electronics, have moved manufacturing jobs from Ireland to China, Eastern Europe, and elsewhere. When Poland joined the European Union in 2004, it became an attractive place for companies to set up manufacturing plants. ... However, Ireland has managed to maintain and attract... 'knowledge-intensive jobs.' Google's European headquarters are based in Dublin, and Facebook announced late last year that they would locate their international headquarters there. But the overall economic picture for Ireland is bleak."

8 of 494 comments (clear)

  1. Re:There once was... by Foldarn · · Score: 3, Informative

    Originally it was an innocent joke. Now it's just a really vulgar limerick! http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/There_once_was_a_man_from_Nantucket

  2. Re:willingness to relocate by Eunuchswear · · Score: 4, Informative

    This is what happens when capital and goods can freely cross borders but people can't.

    Both Eire and Poland are in the EU, free movement of people is guaranteed. If the Dell workers want to keep their jobs they can just move to Lodz.

    --
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  3. Re:willingness to relocate by Skrynesaver · · Score: 3, Informative

    Not to spawn a pointless off-topic flame war or anything, but at least we have a constitution and so the population gets to vote on it. If the Lisbon treaty, which isn't a constitution, were put to a plebiscite throughout Europe Ireland wouldn't be the only ones rejecting it, in fact support for the European project is probably higher in Ireland than anywhere else in Europe.

    Anyway, back on topic, it's a shame for the people in Limerick where the plant was sited, however the jobs going are the assembly line jobs, Dells European planning and management structures remain in Ireland for now.

    --
    "Linux is for noobs"-The new MS fud strategy
  4. Re:Numbers seem odd by MoellerPlesset2 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Actually they're not the second-largest corporate employer. That seems to be an incorrect inference on the part of the Washington Post, because the Dell Ireland website claims they're the second-largest *corporation*.. and the metric for that could easily be something other than employees, i.e. revenue. Of course, 1900 people isn't their entire Irish workforce either.

    There are _definitely_ larger employers in Ireland. 1900 people at a single factory is enough to sustain a mid sized factory town of about 30,000 people (1/3 of Limerick). I know because I've lived in one. And I'm certain Ireland has a handful of towns that size and larger.

    But just to grab some random Irish companies out of a hat and look them up: Eircom has 6,500 employees. Bank of Ireland has 16,026.

  5. Hey guys I am from Poland by rewter · · Score: 3, Informative

    Hey guys I am from Poland and guess what? I can more or less speak english and even know how to post on Slashdot.

    And there's more. We do embedded software and hardware here, we know Linux and it's been that way for years already.

    So it's not different compared to where you live. And as for dell, easy come easy go. They won't stay here longer than 3-4 years and eventualy will continue moving east.

  6. Re:willingness to relocate by rgviza · · Score: 5, Informative

    Oh like citigroup buying a spanish highway construction company with 7bn euros in bailout money from our taxes?

    http://www.thestreet.com/story/10450514/1/citi-to-buy-spanish-highway-operator.html?puc=_tscrss

    Here's the day they got our bailout check. Note the dates:

    http://www.reuters.com/article/marketsNews/idUSN2636427520081126

    Yeap we paid for it. Be pissed, very pissed.

    I can't believe regulators aren't all over them for this. What are we paying them for? What good is all this bailout money doing if they are just using it to buy foriegn companies instead of saving the jobs of the people that effing paid for the bailout? Talk about biting the hand that feeds you. That bailout money did NOT come from Europe.

    Here's the layoff announcement of the US employees:
    http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/154130/citigroup_layoff_could_decimate_it_jobs.html

    grrr

    -Viz

    --
    Don't kid yourself. It's the size of the regexp AND how you use it that counts.
  7. Re:There once was... by Trapick · · Score: 4, Informative

    The town's name is "Limerick". Most common limerick? You guessed it, man from Nantucket. It wasn't all that funny, but that's the joke.

  8. Re:willingness to relocate by meringuoid · · Score: 3, Informative
    You mean Eire and Polska I guess. Or as most of us know then, Ireland and Poland.

    There is actually a good reason to use the Irish name here: it makes it clear that you refer specifically to the Republic of Ireland, not to the island of Ireland as a whole.

    --
    Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.