Supply Chain Council of European Union | Scceu.org
Operations

HP furloughs Corvallis factory workers amid falling printer demand

HP furloughed dozens of contract employees at its Corvallis printer supply factory for the last two weeks of July. The company appears to be responding to a slowdown in demand.

Many of the people working in HP’s Corvallis factory are contract employees hired through staffing firms. HP furloughed at least several dozen contract employees for the last two weeks of the month, according to some workers, who say the total number affected may have been as high as a few hundred.

Furlough notices sent to the workers indicate they were out of work from July 18 through July 29. HP didn’t respond to a message seeking comment.

HP’s Corvallis campus is home to both research and manufacturing. It’s where the company – then known as Hewlett-Packard – invented the inkjet printer in 1984. Printer sales have been dwindling for many years, and HP substantially downsized its Oregon operations in the years after the dot-com bust.

Printer demand surged early in the pandemic, though, as people stocked up on office equipment during a shift to remote work. That proved to be a temporary boost; HP said last month that printer revenue was down 7% in its second quarter and sales of supplies were down 6%.

Oregon has recorded very few layoffs since the pandemic recession ended. The jobless rate is near a record low, 3.6%, and the number of job vacancies in the state considerably outnumbers the number of people looking for work.

Oregon technology employment is at an all-time high, too, reflecting sustained growth at big tech companies that have outposts in the Silicon Forest.

This summer, though, there have been growing signs of unease among major technology employers amid concerns that soaring inflation and market disruptions in China, Ukraine and Russia may trigger a global recession.

Intel, for example, issued dismal second-quarter financial results Thursday and warned of a steep drop in 2022 revenue. The company blamed a weakening global economy for most of its woes and said it will slow hiring and reduce capital.

— Mike Rogoway | [email protected] | Twitter: @rogoway | 503-294-7699

Related posts

Eeriebyss Factory of Terror kicks off new season

scceu

Modern slavery: Latvian man allegedly made to work in factory – BBC

scceu

New Mexican restaurant opens in Old Bag Factory | News

scceu