[lbo-talk] IBM CEO supports stimulus

Doug Henwood DHENWOOD at panix.com
Wed Jan 28 13:50:51 PST 2009


[Some people have said that capital opposes the stimulus plan. Not this faction of capital.]

<http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9126950

>

IBM CEO urges support for $825B stimulus bill Palmisano says a $30B broadband investment can create 1M jobs alone

By Patrick Thibodeau

January 28, 2009 (Computerworld) WASHINGTON -- President Barack Obama's $825 billion economic stimulus package got an enthusiastic endorsement today from IBM Chairman and CEO Sam Palmisano and other business leaders.

Before Palmisano and other executives, including Honeywell International Inc. Chairman and CEO David Cote, trooped out for a White House press briefing today, the group held a meeting that Obama described as "sober," according to a White House transcript. "These companies and the workers they employ are going through times more trying than any that we've seen in a long, long while," the president said.

With Obama looking on, Palmisano went to the lectern to say that "bold and aggressive steps are needed of both business and government working together to address what's required to move the worldwide economies."

Palmisano said he has been in contact with other corporate leaders and has found that "there is a unanimous commitment and support [for] the president."

"We all agree we need to reignite growth in our country," he said. "We need to undertake projects that actually will create jobs and make our infrastructure and make our country much more competitive for the long term."

IBM hasn't officially announced any layoffs. The company has made job cuts in the past two weeks -- more than 4,000, according to the labor group Alliance at IBM. But IBM says those cuts are part of its ongoing adjustment to business needs. Its corporate career site lists more than 3,200 vacancies, from professional posts to entry-level jobs, with 570 of those jobs in the U.S. Employment at IBM has been growing year to year, and the company has more than 400,000 workers worldwide.

Among the items Palmisano cited in the stimulus bill were its call for health care IT spending and a proposal to spend $30 billion for expanded broadband deployment. "We know that $30 billion could create a million jobs in the next 12 months," he said.

"It is an imperative that business and government come together. We help the president get the package through, and we get the work, and we have a lot of work ahead of us," Palmisano said.

Obama, in his remarks, said that "part of what led our economy to this perilous moment was a sense of irresponsibility that prevailed in Wall Street and in Washington. And that's why I called for a new era of responsibility in my inaugural address last week, an era where each of us chips in so that we can climb our way out of this crisis -- executives and factory floor workers, educators and engineers, health care professionals and elected officials."

The president said "corporate America will have to accept its own responsibilities to its workers and the American public."

The administration says its stimulus package will create or save as many as 4 million jobs.



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