Matsushita Electric Industrial Co will cut almost three-fourths of the Singapore workforce at one of its subsidiaries as it reduces production of hard-disk drives for personal computers.
Matsushita-Kotobuki Electronics Industries Ltd, 58 percent-owned by the world's largest consumer-electronics maker, said in a release that it will cut 1,600 of its 2,200 jobs in the island state. The discharged employees will receive compensation, it said.
The move will worsen unemployment in Singapore, which is emerging from last year's recession, the worst in 38 years.
Singapore's jobless rate rose to a three-year high of 4.5 percent in March as manufacturers such as Hitachi Ltd cut back because of last year's slump in electronics.
"There's no letting off in the pace of layoffs," said Suan Teck Kin, an economist at Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp in Singapore. "The second-quarter unemployment picture could be as bad as the first quarter, or worse."
Some manufacturers are leaving the island in search of cheaper production centers elsewhere. Seiko Epson Corp, which makes computer scanners in Singapore, said last month it would move production to Indonesia to lower costs. The company said it would cut 700 jobs in Singapore.
More than 85,000 residents were unemployed in March.
Matsushita-Kotobuki is one of the five units Matsushita Electric will absorb in October by swapping shares. The Matsushita group, which makes electronics under the Panasonic brand, posted a record loss of Japanese yen 431 billion (US$3.5 billion) in the year ended March 31 and is in the midst of a reorganization to cut costs.
Matsushita-Kotobuki and Maxtor Corp of the US agreed that the Japanese company will transfer its hard-disk drive production to Maxtor, which took over Quantum Corp.'s disk drive unit last year. Quantum was Matsushita-Kotobuki's main customer.
Japan has deployed long-range missiles in a southwestern region near China, the Japanese defense minister said yesterday, at a time when ties with Beijing are at their lowest in recent years. The missiles were installed in Kumamoto in the southern region of Kyushu, as Japan is attempting to shore up its military capacity as China steps up naval activity in the East China Sea. “Standoff defense capabilities enable us to counter the threat of enemy forces attempting to invade our country ... while ensuring the safety of our personnel,” Japanese Minister of Defense Shinjiro Koizumi said. “This is an extremely important initiative for
Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Chairwoman Cheng Li-wun (鄭麗文) today accepted an invitation from Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) to lead a delegation to China next month, saying she hopes to promote the peaceful development of cross-strait relations and bring stability to the Taiwan Strait. “I am grateful and happy to accept this invitation,” Cheng said in a statement from the KMT chairperson’s office. Cheng said she hopes both sides can work together to promote the peaceful development of cross-strait relations, enhance exchange and cooperation, bring stability to the Taiwan Strait and improve people’s livelihoods. At today's news conference, Cheng said any efforts to
MORE POPULAR: Taiwan Pass sales increased by 59 percent during the first quarter compared with the same period last year, the Tourism Administration said The Tourism Administration yesterday said that it has streamlined the Taiwan Pass, with two versions available for purchase beginning today. The tourism agency has made the pass available to international tourists since 2024, allowing them to access the high-speed rail, Taiwan Railway Corp services, four MRT systems and four Taiwan Tourist Shuttles. Previously, five types of Taiwan Pass were available, but some tourists have said that the offerings were too complicated. The agency said only two types of Taiwan Pass would be available, starting from a three-day pass with the high-speed rail and a three-day pass with Taiwan Railway Corp. The former costs NT$2,800
The nation’s fastest supercomputer, Nano 4 (晶創26), is scheduled to be launched in the third quarter, and would be used to train large language models in finance and national defense sectors, the National Center for High-Performance Computing (NCHC) said. The supercomputer, which would operate at about 86.05 petaflops, is being tested at a new cloud computing center in the Southern Taiwan Science Park in Tainan. The exterior of the server cabinet features chip circuitry patterns overlaid with a map of Taiwan, highlighting the nation’s central position in the semiconductor industry. The center also houses Taiwania 2, Taiwania 3, Forerunner 1 and